How Much Does a Divorce Cost in Virginia? 2026 Complete Price Guide

By Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq.Virginia12 min read

At a Glance

Residency requirement:
Under Virginia Code § 20-97, at least one spouse must have been an actual bona fide resident and domiciliary of Virginia for at least six months immediately before filing the divorce suit. The other spouse does not need to be a Virginia resident. Military members stationed in Virginia for six months are presumed to meet this requirement.
Filing fee:
$80–$100
Waiting period:
Virginia uses statutory child support guidelines under Virginia Code § 20-108.2 to calculate child support based on the parents' combined gross monthly income. As of July 1, 2025, the guidelines cover combined gross monthly incomes up to $42,500. The guidelines consider the number of children, health care costs, work-related childcare costs, and each parent's share of combined income. There is a rebuttable presumption that the guideline amount is correct.

As of March 2026. Reviewed every 3 months. Verify with your local clerk's office.

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Virginia divorces cost between $700 and $50,000 or more, depending on whether the case is uncontested or contested. The typical uncontested divorce with minimal legal assistance runs $500 to $1,500, while contested divorces involving custody disputes or significant assets average $15,000 to $30,000 in attorney fees alone. Filing fees range from $86 to $95 depending on the circuit court, and separation requirements add time-based costs since Virginia mandates 6-12 months of living apart before finalizing a no-fault divorce.

Key Facts: Virginia Divorce Costs at a Glance

Cost ElementAmount
Filing Fee$86-$95 (varies by county)
Waiting Period6 months (with agreement, no children) or 12 months
Residency Requirement6 months domicile
GroundsNo-fault (separation) or fault-based
Property DivisionEquitable distribution (fair, not 50/50)
Average Attorney Hourly Rate$323 (range: $200-$650)
Uncontested Divorce Total$500-$1,500
Contested Divorce Total$15,000-$50,000+

Virginia Divorce Filing Fees Explained

The base filing fee for divorce in Virginia is $60 as set by Va. Code § 17.1-275, with $10 of that amount allocated to the Courts Technology Fund. However, total circuit court filing costs typically range from $86 to $95 when additional administrative fees are included. These fees apply to the petitioner (the spouse who files first), and no additional fee is charged for filing a counterclaim or responsive pleading in annulment, divorce, or separate maintenance proceedings.

Virginia courts offer fee waivers for low-income filers. You may qualify if your household income falls at or below 125% of the federal poverty guidelines. The Virginia Judicial System provides a fee waiver request process through the circuit court clerk's office.

Beyond filing, expect these additional court costs:

These fees are current as of March 2026. Verify exact amounts with your local circuit court clerk, as costs vary by county. Use the Virginia Circuit Court Fee Calculator for your specific jurisdiction.

Attorney Fees: The Largest Divorce Expense

Virginia divorce attorneys charge an average hourly rate of $323, with Northern Virginia attorneys commanding $400 to $500 per hour or more. Rates across the Commonwealth range from $200 per hour for newer attorneys in less populated areas to $650 per hour for senior partners at major firms in Fairfax, Arlington, and Alexandria.

Most Virginia divorce attorneys require initial retainers between $2,500 and $5,000. This upfront payment is deposited into a trust account and billed against as the attorney works on your case. Complex contested divorces may require retainer replenishments of $5,000 to $10,000 as litigation progresses.

Attorney Costs by Divorce Type

Divorce TypeTypical Attorney CostTimeline
Uncontested (DIY with review)$500-$1,5006-9 months
Uncontested (full representation)$2,500-$5,0006-9 months
Contested (moderate complexity)$10,000-$20,00012-18 months
Contested (high-asset/custody)$25,000-$50,000+18-36 months

Separation agreement drafting alone typically costs $1,500 to $5,000 depending on complexity. This document addresses property division, spousal support, child custody, and child support, and is required for the 6-month separation track under Va. Code § 20-91.

Uncontested vs. Contested Divorce Costs

An uncontested divorce in Virginia costs between $500 and $1,500 total when both spouses agree on all terms including property division, spousal support, and child custody. These savings come from eliminating court appearances, discovery disputes, and extensive attorney negotiations. Some Virginia law firms offer flat-fee uncontested divorce packages starting at $599 plus court costs.

Contested divorces in Virginia average $15,000 to $30,000 per spouse, with high-conflict cases involving custody evaluations, business valuations, and forensic accounting exceeding $50,000 per party. Each court hearing typically costs $1,000 to $3,000 in attorney time, and a single day of trial can run $5,000 to $10,000 when preparation, appearance time, and follow-up are included.

The cost difference between contested and uncontested divorce in Virginia can exceed $40,000, making settlement negotiations and mediation financially prudent even when spouses disagree on some issues.

Virginia's Separation Requirement Adds Time and Cost

Virginia requires couples to live separate and apart before obtaining a no-fault divorce under Va. Code § 20-91. Two pathways exist:

  1. 12 months of separation: Required when minor children are involved or when spouses have not signed a written separation agreement

  2. 6 months of separation: Available when there are no minor children and both spouses have executed a written separation agreement

This mandatory waiting period adds indirect costs. Maintaining two households for 6-12 months typically costs $1,000 to $3,000 per month more than a single household, representing $6,000 to $36,000 in additional living expenses before the divorce can be finalized.

Spouses may live separately under the same roof if finances require, but they must demonstrate complete cessation of marital relations including separate sleeping arrangements, no shared meals, no joint social activities, and no intimate contact. Courts scrutinize same-roof separations more closely, sometimes requiring corroborating witness testimony.

Mediation Costs in Virginia

Divorce mediation in Virginia costs $3,500 to $9,000 for both parties combined, with mediators charging $300 to $350 per hour (typically split between spouses). Northern Virginia mediators in Fairfax, Arlington, and Alexandria often charge at the higher end of this range. Total mediation costs include case analysis, support calculations, 1-4 mediation sessions, and preparation of a Marital Settlement Agreement and Parenting Plan.

Compared to litigation costing $25,000 to $100,000 or more per party, mediation offers savings of 60-80% while typically resolving cases in 3-6 months rather than 12-24 months for contested litigation.

Court-ordered mediation for child custody and visitation disputes is often provided at no charge. Virginia judges must refer parents to mediation orientation sessions unless inappropriate circumstances exist, such as domestic violence history.

Property Division Costs and Considerations

Virginia follows equitable distribution under Va. Code § 20-107.3, meaning marital property is divided fairly but not necessarily equally. The court classifies assets as marital, separate, or hybrid property before assigning values and distributing them.

Property-related divorce costs include:

ServiceTypical Cost
Real estate appraisal$300-$500 per property
Business valuation$5,000-$50,000
Pension/retirement valuation$500-$2,000
QDRO preparation$500-$1,500
Forensic accounting$10,000-$50,000+

Virginia courts consider 11 statutory factors when dividing property, including each spouse's monetary and non-monetary contributions, marriage duration, age and health of each party, how and when property was acquired, debts and liabilities, tax consequences, and whether either spouse dissipated marital assets.

Under Virginia law, retirement accounts can be divided, but the court cannot award more than 50% of the marital share to the non-employee spouse. A Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) is required to divide 401(k)s and pensions without tax penalties, adding $500 to $1,500 in preparation costs.

Child Custody and Support Costs

Virginia updated its child support guidelines effective July 1, 2025, under Va. Code § 20-108.2. The new guidelines cover combined gross monthly incomes up to $42,500 (increased from $35,000) and include calculations for incomes exceeding that cap. For incomes above $42,500 per month, courts add a percentage of excess income ranging from 2.6% for one child to 5% for six children.

Child custody disputes add significant costs to Virginia divorces:

Sole custody calculations apply when a parent has 90 days or fewer of parenting time annually. Shared custody calculations apply when parenting time exceeds 90 days, with support amounts generally decreasing as the non-custodial parent's time increases.

Spousal Support Impact on Divorce Costs

Virginia uses a pendente lite formula for temporary spousal support during divorce proceedings. With minor children, temporary support equals 26% of the payor's monthly gross income minus 58% of the payee's monthly gross income. Without minor children, the formula is 27% minus 50%.

However, Virginia courts cannot use this formula for final support awards after trial. Instead, judges consider 13 statutory factors under Va. Code § 20-107.1 including income, marriage duration, standard of living, career sacrifices, and contributions to the other spouse's earning capacity.

Virginia's adultery bar completely prohibits spousal support awards to a spouse who committed adultery unless denial would constitute manifest injustice. This strict rule can eliminate support obligations worth hundreds of thousands of dollars over time, making fault grounds strategically significant even in no-fault states.

Ways to Reduce Virginia Divorce Costs

Organizing financial documents before meeting with an attorney saves $500 to $2,000 in billable time. Gather bank statements, tax returns (last 3 years), retirement account statements, mortgage documents, vehicle titles, and credit card statements.

Other cost-reduction strategies include:

  1. Choose uncontested divorce when possible: Agreeing on all terms before filing saves $10,000-$40,000 versus litigation

  2. Use mediation for disputed issues: $3,500-$9,000 total versus $30,000-$100,000 for trial

  3. Consider limited-scope representation: Pay an attorney to review documents you prepare yourself ($500-$1,500)

  4. File for no-fault divorce: Fault-based divorces require proving adultery, cruelty, or desertion, adding $5,000-$15,000 in attorney fees for evidence gathering and trial

  5. Settle child custody cooperatively: Custody evaluations and guardians ad litem add $6,000-$25,000 to divorce costs

Virginia Residency Requirements

Under Va. Code § 20-97, at least one spouse must be an actual bona fide resident and domiciliary of Virginia for at least 6 months before filing. Domicile means intent to remain permanently or indefinitely, not merely having a residence.

Military personnel stationed in Virginia for 6 months or more are presumed to be Virginia domiciliaries, even if stationed on federal military installations with exclusive federal jurisdiction.

Filing location options include:

  • The county or city where spouses last lived together
  • The county or city where the defendant resides (if a Virginia resident)
  • The county or city where the plaintiff resides (if defendant is a non-resident)

How Much Does Divorce Cost in Virginia? Final Cost Summary

Total Virginia divorce costs depend primarily on whether the divorce is contested or uncontested:

Divorce ScenarioTotal Cost Range
DIY uncontested (forms + filing only)$700-$1,000
Uncontested with attorney assistance$2,500-$5,000
Mediated divorce$5,000-$10,000
Contested (moderate)$15,000-$25,000
Contested with custody dispute$25,000-$50,000
High-asset/high-conflict contested$50,000-$100,000+

Filing fees ($86-$95) represent a tiny fraction of total costs. Attorney fees ($2,500-$50,000+), mediation ($3,500-$9,000), expert witnesses ($5,000-$50,000), and the indirect costs of maintaining separate households during the 6-12 month separation requirement comprise the bulk of Virginia divorce expenses.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a simple divorce cost in Virginia?

A simple uncontested divorce in Virginia costs $700 to $1,500 total, including the $86-$95 filing fee, service of process ($40-$75), and basic legal document preparation. If you hire an attorney for full representation in an uncontested case, expect $2,500 to $5,000 in legal fees.

How long does a divorce take in Virginia?

Virginia divorces take 6 to 18 months depending on circumstances. Uncontested divorces with a separation agreement and no children finalize in approximately 6-8 months (after the required 6-month separation). Contested divorces typically require 12-24 months, with complex custody or property disputes extending to 24-36 months.

Can I get a divorce in Virginia without a lawyer?

Yes, Virginia allows pro se (self-represented) divorce filings. The Virginia Judicial System provides self-help resources and forms. However, without an attorney, you risk costly mistakes in property division, support calculations, and custody arrangements. Consider limited-scope representation ($500-$1,500) for document review even if filing pro se.

What is the cheapest way to get divorced in Virginia?

The cheapest Virginia divorce is an uncontested filing using court-provided forms, costing approximately $700-$1,000 total. Both spouses must agree on all terms, complete the 6-month separation requirement (no minor children, signed agreement), and avoid contested hearings. Online divorce document services charge $150-$350 for form preparation.

Do I have to pay alimony in Virginia?

Virginia courts may award spousal support based on 13 statutory factors including income disparity, marriage duration (typically 10+ years for longer-term awards), and each spouse's earning capacity. The pendente lite formula (27% of payor's income minus 50% of payee's income, without children) provides guidance but is not binding for final awards.

How is property divided in Virginia divorce?

Virginia uses equitable distribution under Va. Code § 20-107.3, meaning marital property is divided fairly but not necessarily 50/50. Courts classify assets as marital (acquired during marriage), separate (owned before marriage or inherited), or hybrid, then consider 11 factors including contributions, marriage length, and each spouse's financial circumstances.

What are the grounds for divorce in Virginia?

Virginia offers no-fault divorce based on 6-12 months of separation and fault-based divorce for adultery, sodomy/buggery with another person, felony conviction with 1+ year imprisonment, cruelty, or desertion/abandonment. Fault-based divorces have no mandatory waiting period but require proving the alleged misconduct.

How much does a divorce lawyer cost per hour in Virginia?

Virginia divorce attorneys charge $200 to $650 per hour, with the statewide average at $323 per hour. Northern Virginia attorneys (Fairfax, Arlington, Alexandria) typically charge $400-$500+ per hour. Initial retainers range from $2,500 to $5,000 for uncontested cases and $5,000 to $15,000 for contested matters.

Is mediation required for divorce in Virginia?

Mediation is not universally required, but Virginia courts must refer parents to mediation orientation sessions for child custody and visitation disputes unless circumstances make it inappropriate (such as domestic violence). Court-ordered mediation is typically free, while private mediation costs $300-$350 per hour split between parties.

Can filing fees be waived in Virginia divorce?

Yes, Virginia circuit courts grant filing fee waivers to qualifying low-income individuals. You may qualify if your household income falls at or below 125% of the federal poverty guidelines. Request a fee waiver through your local circuit court clerk's office before filing.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a simple divorce cost in Virginia?

A simple uncontested divorce in Virginia costs $700 to $1,500 total, including the $86-$95 filing fee, service of process ($40-$75), and basic legal document preparation. If you hire an attorney for full representation in an uncontested case, expect $2,500 to $5,000 in legal fees.

How long does a divorce take in Virginia?

Virginia divorces take 6 to 18 months depending on circumstances. Uncontested divorces with a separation agreement and no children finalize in approximately 6-8 months (after the required 6-month separation). Contested divorces typically require 12-24 months, with complex custody or property disputes extending to 24-36 months.

Can I get a divorce in Virginia without a lawyer?

Yes, Virginia allows pro se (self-represented) divorce filings. The Virginia Judicial System provides self-help resources and forms. However, without an attorney, you risk costly mistakes in property division, support calculations, and custody arrangements. Consider limited-scope representation ($500-$1,500) for document review even if filing pro se.

What is the cheapest way to get divorced in Virginia?

The cheapest Virginia divorce is an uncontested filing using court-provided forms, costing approximately $700-$1,000 total. Both spouses must agree on all terms, complete the 6-month separation requirement (no minor children, signed agreement), and avoid contested hearings. Online divorce document services charge $150-$350 for form preparation.

Do I have to pay alimony in Virginia?

Virginia courts may award spousal support based on 13 statutory factors including income disparity, marriage duration (typically 10+ years for longer-term awards), and each spouse's earning capacity. The pendente lite formula (27% of payor's income minus 50% of payee's income, without children) provides guidance but is not binding for final awards.

How is property divided in Virginia divorce?

Virginia uses equitable distribution under Va. Code § 20-107.3, meaning marital property is divided fairly but not necessarily 50/50. Courts classify assets as marital (acquired during marriage), separate (owned before marriage or inherited), or hybrid, then consider 11 factors including contributions, marriage length, and each spouse's financial circumstances.

What are the grounds for divorce in Virginia?

Virginia offers no-fault divorce based on 6-12 months of separation and fault-based divorce for adultery, sodomy/buggery with another person, felony conviction with 1+ year imprisonment, cruelty, or desertion/abandonment. Fault-based divorces have no mandatory waiting period but require proving the alleged misconduct.

How much does a divorce lawyer cost per hour in Virginia?

Virginia divorce attorneys charge $200 to $650 per hour, with the statewide average at $323 per hour. Northern Virginia attorneys (Fairfax, Arlington, Alexandria) typically charge $400-$500+ per hour. Initial retainers range from $2,500 to $5,000 for uncontested cases and $5,000 to $15,000 for contested matters.

Is mediation required for divorce in Virginia?

Mediation is not universally required, but Virginia courts must refer parents to mediation orientation sessions for child custody and visitation disputes unless circumstances make it inappropriate (such as domestic violence). Court-ordered mediation is typically free, while private mediation costs $300-$350 per hour split between parties.

Can filing fees be waived in Virginia divorce?

Yes, Virginia circuit courts grant filing fee waivers to qualifying low-income individuals. You may qualify if your household income falls at or below 125% of the federal poverty guidelines. Request a fee waiver through your local circuit court clerk's office before filing.

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Written By

Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq.

Florida Bar No. 21022 | Covering Virginia divorce law

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