Michigan Online Divorce
$299 Flat Fee

File your Michigan divorce from home. Court-ready documents prepared within 24 hours, with filing instructions specific to your Michigan county courthouse.

Michigan Divorce Requirements

Residency Requirement

At least one spouse must have been a resident of Michigan for at least 180 days and of the filing county for at least 10 days.

Grounds for Divorce

Michigan is a no-fault state. The sole ground is that the marriage relationship has been destroyed with no reasonable likelihood of restoration.

Court Filing Fee

$175 - $255 (varies by county)

Note: This is the court's fee, separate from our $299 document preparation fee.

Typical Timeline

Michigan has a 60-day waiting period (6 months if minor children are involved, though this can be shortened). Uncontested cases typically finalize within 60 days to 6 months.

Waiting Period

60 days (6 months with minor children; may be reduced by court order)

Property Division

Equitable distribution state. Courts divide marital property fairly, considering factors like marriage length, earning capacity, and needs.

What You Get for $299

All required Michigan divorce forms, completed and court-ready
Filing instructions specific to your Michigan county courthouse
Free amendments if your court requests any changes
Phone and email support throughout the process
Property and debt division worksheets
Child custody agreement templates (if applicable)
24-hour document turnaround after completing the questionnaire
100% satisfaction guarantee with 30-day refund policy

Ready to File for Divorce in Michigan?

Our simple questionnaire takes about 20 minutes. You will have your court-ready Michigan divorce documents within 24 hours.

Secure payment. 30-day money-back guarantee.

Not ready to file yet?

Get the free Michigan divorce filing checklist: residency rules, court fees, waiting periods, and the documents you need, all in one email.

Free. One follow-up email series, unsubscribe any time.

Spouse won't agree, or you disagree on property or custody? See your options for a contested Michigan divorce →