Understanding Pennsylvania Divorce Law
Pennsylvania offers both no-fault and fault-based divorce. Most divorces in Allegheny County are filed as no-fault, which are typically faster and less expensive. To file in Allegheny County, either you or your spouse must have lived in Pennsylvania for at least six months before filing.
No-Fault Divorce — Mutual Consent (§ 3301(c))
When both spouses agree the marriage is irretrievably broken and consent to the divorce, the matter may proceed under mutual consent. After a 90-day waiting period from the date of service, both parties execute Affidavits of Consent. If all economic claims have been resolved or waived, the court enters a final divorce decree. This is the fastest option available in Pennsylvania.
No-Fault Divorce — Irretrievable Breakdown (§ 3301(d))
When one spouse does not consent to the divorce, the case proceeds on separation grounds. As of December 3, 2016, Pennsylvania reduced the required separation period from two years to one year. Once one year has elapsed from the date of separation, the filing party may proceed regardless of whether the other party consents.
How a Divorce Case Proceeds in Allegheny County
While every matter is unique, most divorce cases in Allegheny County move through a recognizable sequence. Understanding where you are in that sequence — and what comes next — is part of what the firm provides from the outset.
Not every case requires every step. An uncontested mutual consent divorce may move from filing to final decree in three to six months. A contested matter with significant assets, custody disputes, or a non-cooperative opposing party may take eighteen months or longer — with hearings, exceptions, and judicial involvement along the way. The preparation is the same either way.
How Long Does a Pittsburgh Divorce Take?
- Uncontested mutual consent divorce: 3–6 months from filing to final decree
- Contested divorce: 12–18 months on average; depends on complexity and court scheduling
- High-conflict cases: 2+ years possible; multiple court appearances, extensive discovery, expert testimony
The decisions made during the divorce will govern finances and obligations for years. A case that is prepared to litigate effectively will also negotiate more effectively — and settle sooner, on better terms.
Mediation, Collaborative Divorce, and Arbitration
Divorce Mediation
A neutral mediator helps parties reach agreement — less expensive than litigation, confidential, faster, and better for co-parenting relationships. The mediator does not provide legal advice and does not impose an outcome. Independent legal review of any mediated agreement is strongly recommended before signing.
Collaborative Divorce
Both parties commit to resolving the matter without court intervention, working with their respective collaborative attorneys and neutral professionals. Governed by Pennsylvania's Collaborative Law Act (enacted June 28, 2018). If the process fails, both collaborative attorneys must withdraw.
Arbitration
A private arbitrator acts as a judge and makes binding decisions. Faster than court litigation, more flexible scheduling, and maintains privacy. Available in Allegheny County as an alternative to the public court process for contested financial issues.
"Scott understood the process completely, set my expectations accurately, and we reached exactly the settlement he'd proposed at the very beginning."
Contact UsAllegheny County Divorce Costs (2026)
- Divorce Complaint: $191.75
- Additional Counts: $45.25 each
- Sheriff service: $75–100
- Certified mail service: $15–25
- Private process server: $100–150
Attorney fees, expert fees, and other costs are addressed in detail in the Cost of Divorce in Pittsburgh: Complete Financial Guide 2026 →