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Virginia Divorce Law July 1, 2026: No Waiting Period to File

Effective July 1, 2026, Virginia allows a bed-and-board divorce with no waiting period to file when spouses live separate and apart. What it means.

By Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq.Virginia6 min read

Effective July 1, 2026, Virginia allows either spouse to file for a bed-and-board (limited) divorce as soon as the couple lives separate and apart with at least one spouse intending permanent separation — eliminating the prior six-month or one-year waiting period to file. Families can now reach court orders on custody, support, and the marital home far sooner, according to Livesay & Myers.

DetailSummary
What happenedVirginia added a new separation-based ground for a bed-and-board (limited) divorce with no waiting period to file
WhenEffective July 1, 2026
WhereCommonwealth of Virginia
Who's affectedAny Virginia spouse who is living separate and apart, especially those needing early custody or support orders
Key statuteVa. Code § 20-95 (grounds for divorce from bed and board)
ImpactCourt access to custody, visitation, child support, spousal support, and marital-home orders begins immediately rather than after 6–12 months

Why this matters legally

This change removes the single biggest procedural barrier that kept separated Virginia spouses out of court: time. Before July 1, 2026, a spouse generally had to wait six months (no minor children, signed separation agreement) or one full year before filing for a no-fault divorce. During that gap, a spouse could not obtain court-ordered custody, child support, or spousal support through a divorce action unless fault grounds applied.

The new separation-based bed-and-board ground under Va. Code § 20-95 lets either spouse file the moment the couple is living separate and apart, provided at least one spouse intends the separation to be permanent. A bed-and-board divorce is a limited divorce — it does not dissolve the marriage — but it opens the courthouse door. Once the case is filed, the court can enter pendente lite (temporary) orders addressing the most urgent family needs.

The practical effect is a definitive shift: financial and custodial protection now attaches at separation, not after a year of waiting. For a spouse who left an unstable household, that difference is enormous.

How Virginia law handles this

Virginia recognizes two categories of divorce: divorce from bed and board (a mensa et thoro), which is a limited or partial divorce, and divorce from the bond of matrimony (a vinculo matrimonii), which is an absolute divorce that ends the marriage. The new ground applies to the bed-and-board category under Va. Code § 20-95.

The absolute no-fault divorce timelines under Va. Code § 20-91 are unchanged. A spouse still must live separate and apart for one year — or six months with a signed separation agreement and no minor children — before a court can grant an absolute divorce that fully dissolves the marriage. What changed is when you can file the limited action and start securing orders, not when the marriage legally ends.

Separation in Virginia has two elements the courts apply strictly: a physical separation (which can occur under the same roof if the couple stops living as spouses) and an intent by at least one spouse that the separation be permanent. Establishing the separation date remains legally significant because it starts the clock for a later absolute divorce and can affect equitable distribution of property acquired afterward.

Because a bed-and-board decree is a stepping stone, Virginia law allows a party to later merge it into an absolute divorce after the statutory separation period runs. This means a spouse can file early for protection under the new ground, then convert to a full divorce once the one-year or six-month period is complete. To understand how the phases connect, review the Virginia divorce process and how no-fault divorce grounds operate.

Practical takeaways

  1. Document your separation date precisely. The day you begin living separate and apart with intent to remain so triggers your ability to file under the new ground and starts the clock toward an absolute divorce. Note the date in writing and preserve evidence such as a new lease, forwarded mail, or changed accounts.

  2. File early if you need urgent orders. If you need immediate decisions on custody, visitation, child support, spousal support, or exclusive use of the marital home, the new separation-based ground lets you file a bed-and-board action right away instead of waiting six to twelve months.

  3. Understand the difference between filing and finalizing. Filing early gets you into court; it does not shorten the one-year or six-month period required under Va. Code § 20-91 to obtain an absolute divorce that ends the marriage. Plan for both phases.

  4. Confirm residency before filing. Virginia requires that at least one spouse has been a bona fide resident and domiciliary of the Commonwealth for at least six months before filing. Review residency requirements if you or your spouse recently moved.

  5. Budget for a two-stage process. Because you may file a limited divorce first and convert later, ask about costs for the full path. Our Virginia divorce cost estimator and divorce timeline tool can help you plan the sequence and expenses.

  6. Reassess if you are already separated. If you separated before July 1, 2026, and have been stuck waiting to file, this change may let you go to court now. Build a personalized divorce roadmap or find a divorce attorney to evaluate your options under the new rule.

The Virginia bed-and-board change is one of the most consumer-friendly divorce reforms the Commonwealth has passed in years, because it decouples court access from the waiting period. Spouses facing custody disputes or income loss no longer have to endure months of legal limbo before a judge can help. If you are separated or planning to separate in Virginia, this is a good moment to map out your next steps.

If you want to understand how this change applies to your specific circumstances, a licensed Virginia family law attorney can walk you through the timing of a bed-and-board filing versus an absolute divorce and help you prioritize the orders you need first.

This article discusses recent news and provides general legal commentary. It does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Consult a qualified family law attorney for advice specific to your situation.

Key Questions

When does the new Virginia divorce filing rule take effect?

The new separation-based bed-and-board ground takes effect July 1, 2026. As of that date, either spouse may file a limited (bed-and-board) divorce as soon as the couple lives separate and apart with intent to remain permanently separated — with no waiting period required to file.

Do I still have to wait a year to get divorced in Virginia?

To obtain an absolute divorce that ends the marriage, yes. Under Va. Code § 20-91, you still need one year of separation, or six months with a signed separation agreement and no minor children. The July 1, 2026 change only eliminates the waiting period to file a limited bed-and-board action.

What is a bed-and-board divorce in Virginia?

A bed-and-board (a mensa et thoro) divorce is a limited or partial divorce under Va. Code § 20-95. It does not dissolve the marriage, but it lets a court enter orders on custody, child support, spousal support, and use of the marital home while the parties remain legally married.

Can I get custody and support orders sooner under the new law?

Yes. Effective July 1, 2026, filing a bed-and-board divorce as soon as you separate allows the court to issue pendente lite orders on custody, visitation, child support, spousal support, and exclusive use of the marital home — months earlier than the prior six-to-twelve-month waiting period allowed.

Does the new rule change Virginia's residency requirement?

No. Virginia still requires that at least one spouse be a bona fide resident and domiciliary of the Commonwealth for at least six months before filing any divorce action. The July 1, 2026 change affects the separation waiting period to file, not the six-month residency requirement.

Written By

Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq.

Florida Bar No. 21022 | Covering Virginia divorce law