One of the most searched questions about Nevada divorce is whether there is a mandatory waiting period. The short answer may surprise you: Nevada has no mandatory waiting period between filing for divorce and receiving a final decree. However, there is an important residency requirement that must be met before you can file at all -- and that is where most of the timeline begins.
Bottom line: Nevada requires one spouse to live in the state for at least 6 weeks before filing. After filing, an uncontested divorce can be finalized in as little as a few weeks. Contested divorces take longer -- not because of waiting periods, but because of disputes that require court resolution.
Under NRS 125.020, at least one spouse must have been a resident of Nevada for a minimum of six weeks immediately before filing for divorce. Nevada is one of the more permissive states when it comes to residency -- many states require six months to a year. This is one reason Nevada has historically been known as a relatively accessible place to divorce.
You do not both need to be Nevada residents. If one spouse has lived in Nevada for six weeks, the other can live anywhere -- even another country -- and Nevada courts still have jurisdiction to grant the divorce.
No. Unlike states such as California (which has a six-month waiting period) or Texas (which has a 60-day waiting period), Nevada imposes no mandatory delay between filing and finalization. Once your paperwork is filed and all issues are resolved, the court can issue a final decree.
The timeline depends entirely on whether your divorce is contested or uncontested:
If both spouses agree on all issues -- property division, alimony, child custody, and child support -- you can file a Joint Petition for Divorce. Nevada courts review these cases without requiring a hearing in most situations. From filing to final decree typically takes:
If one spouse files and the other is served (rather than filing jointly), there is a response period of 21 days for Nevada residents. After that, if no response is filed, the case can proceed as a default divorce. Timeline: typically 4 to 10 weeks.
When spouses disagree on one or more issues, the case enters the contested divorce process. This involves discovery, financial disclosures, possible mediation, and potentially a trial. Contested divorces in Clark County commonly take:
The length of a contested divorce is driven by the complexity of the disputes, not by any statutory waiting period.
The most common causes of divorce delays in Nevada have nothing to do with waiting periods:
PRO LAW GROUP's approach: Our mediation-first strategy and flat-fee billing model are specifically designed to resolve Nevada divorces as efficiently as possible. When both parties can reach agreement, we work to get your case finalized in weeks, not months.
Yes -- the most effective steps are agreeing on as many issues as possible before filing, completing financial disclosures promptly, and using the Joint Petition process if you and your spouse are in agreement. See our detailed guide: Speeding Up a Divorce in Nevada: Practical Steps.
PRO LAW GROUP has helped Las Vegas families resolve divorces efficiently for 25+ years. Contact us for a free consultation or call (702) 474-0500 -- Monday through Thursday 8:30am-5pm, Friday 8:30am-3pm.