How to File an Uncontested Divorce in Ohio: Exact Steps, Forms, and Fees
08-Apr-2026
How to File an Uncontested Divorce in Ohio: Exact Steps, Forms, and Fees
Residency required6 months
Waiting periodNo mandatory waiting period
Filing courtCourt of Common Pleas
Property ruleequitable distribution
Filing fee range$200–$330
Total est. cost$200–$330
An uncontested divorce in Ohio is faster, cheaper, and far less stressful than a contested one. If both spouses agree on all the terms, this guide covers the exact forms, fees, and filing steps required by Ohio’s Court of Common Pleas.
Does Your Case Qualify as Uncontested in Ohio?
The word “uncontested” has a specific legal meaning — it doesn’t mean you’re on good terms with your spouse, just that you agree on all the major issues. Here’s the full eligibility checklist:
✓Both spouses agree on all terms — property, debt, and any support arrangements
✓If you have children: both spouses agree on custody arrangements, parenting schedule, and child support amount
✓At least one spouse meets Ohio’s residency requirement (6 months)
✓Neither spouse wants to contest the divorce or request contested hearings
✓Both spouses are willing to sign the required documents
Good news for most couples: approximately 90% of US divorces are resolved without going to trial, according to bar association research. If you and your spouse can reach agreement on the issues above, you qualify for the uncontested process in Ohio.
The Exact Forms Required for an Uncontested Divorce in Ohio
Unlike some states with a single statewide form set, Ohio divorce forms can vary by county. The forms listed below are the standard documents required — your document service provides the correct versions for your specific county.
Document
Ohio Form Name
Purpose
Initial petition
Petition for Dissolution (for uncontested) — Separation Agreement required
Filed by petitioner (or jointly) at Court of Common Pleas
Respondent response
N/A — joint petition for dissolution
Signed by respondent to avoid formal service; waives right to contest
Final decree
Judgment Entry of Dissolution of Marriage
Signed by judge — this is the document that legally ends the marriage
Signed by both spouses — covers all property, debt, support, and parenting terms
Important: Ohio’s Dissolution process is a joint filing — both spouses file a Petition for Dissolution with a signed Separation Agreement attached. No service required. Typically faster than a contested divorce filing.
Court filing fees are set by the state and county — they are the same whether you hire an attorney or file yourself. Here’s every fee you should expect:
Fee Item
Cost
Notes
Court filing fee
$200–$330
Paid to the Court of Common Pleas when you file
Document preparation
$199
OnlineDivorce.com — generates your Ohio-specific forms
Process server (if needed)
$0
Often $0 if spouse signs voluntary waiver/acceptance
Certified copies of decree
$5–$25 each
Order 3–4 at time of filing for name changes and account updates
Total estimated
$200–$330
vs. $11,000+ average with an attorney
Fee waiver available: If your income falls below Ohio’s poverty guideline thresholds, you may qualify for a court filing fee waiver. Ask the clerk’s office for the Application for Civil Indigent Status (or equivalent form) when you go to file. The $199 document service fee is separate from court fees and is not waivable through the court.
Ohio Property Division: What “Uncontested” Means for Your Assets
Ohio follows equitable distribution for marital property. Here’s what that means in practice:
Equitable distribution states divide marital assets and debts fairly — which typically means roughly equal but can vary based on each spouse’s financial circumstances, contributions, and needs. In an uncontested divorce, you and your spouse decide what’s fair and document it in your Settlement Agreement. The judge approves agreements that appear reasonable and voluntary.
Assets acquired before the marriage, gifts, and inheritances are generally considered separate property in Ohio and are not subject to division — regardless of whether it’s an equitable distribution or community property state.
Step-by-Step: Filing Your Ohio Uncontested Divorce
1 Confirm your eligibilityBoth spouses must agree on all terms, and at least one must meet Ohio’s residency requirement (6 months). If any major issue — property division, custody, support — is disputed, you’ll need to resolve it before proceeding with the uncontested process.
2 Prepare your Settlement AgreementDraft and sign a Marital Settlement Agreement covering all property, debts, spousal support, and child-related terms. This must be complete before you file your petition.
3 File the Petition for Dissolution (for uncontested) — Separation Agreement required at the Court of Common PleasThe petitioning spouse files the completed petition in the appropriate Court of Common Pleas. Pay the Ohio filing fee ($200–$330). The clerk assigns a case number and stamps your copies.
4 Serve your spouse (or get a waiver)Your spouse must be formally notified. For uncontested cases, the simplest method is having your spouse sign an Acceptance of Service or Waiver — this eliminates the need for a process server. If they won’t sign, a process server or sheriff completes service for approximately $0.
5 Submit all required documents to the courtIn addition to the petition and settlement agreement, Ohio typically requires financial affidavits or disclosure statements. Your document service provides a complete filing checklist. Some counties require these to be submitted at filing; others accept them before the final hearing.
6 Obtain the judge’s signature on the decreeFor uncontested cases in Ohio, the court may schedule a brief hearing (10–15 minutes) or sign based on submitted paperwork. The judge reviews your Settlement Agreement and signs the Judgment Entry of Dissolution of Marriage. This is the document that legally dissolves the marriage.
7 Collect certified copies of your decreeObtain at least 3–4 certified copies from the clerk’s office at the time of signing. You’ll need them to update your name on IDs, close joint accounts, update beneficiary designations, and refinance any joint mortgage.
Ready to File Your Ohio Uncontested Divorce?
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What Happens to Property, Debt, and Support in Ohio
Real Property (Your Home)
Your Settlement Agreement must specify what happens to any jointly owned real estate. The three standard options are: (1) sell the home and split the proceeds, (2) one spouse buys out the other’s equity share and refinances the mortgage into their name only, or (3) defer the sale for a defined period (often until children are grown). All three must be agreed upon and documented.
Critical: Your divorce decree cannot remove a spouse from mortgage liability — only a refinance can do that. If the staying spouse is not removed from the mortgage through a refinance, both spouses remain legally responsible for the debt regardless of what the divorce decree says.
Retirement Accounts
Dividing a 401(k), 403(b), or pension requires a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) — a separate legal document beyond the divorce decree. The QDRO is submitted to the retirement plan administrator after the divorce is finalized. A QDRO specialist typically charges $500–$2,500. IRAs are divided through a simpler “transfer incident to divorce” instruction to the custodian, also documented in your Settlement Agreement.
Spousal Support
In an uncontested divorce, you and your spouse agree on the amount, duration, and conditions of any spousal support. Your Settlement Agreement should specify: the monthly amount, how long it will be paid, under what conditions it terminates (remarriage, cohabitation, etc.), and whether it is modifiable or fixed. Include “no spousal support” explicitly if neither party will pay support.
Children: Custody, Parenting Time, and Child Support
If you have minor children, your Settlement Agreement must include a detailed Parenting Plan specifying: legal custody (who makes major decisions), physical custody (where children primarily live), parenting time schedules (regular, holiday, and vacation), and child support amounts calculated per Ohio’s child support guidelines. Ohio judges review parenting plans for the best interests of the children before approval — clear, detailed, and child-focused agreements are approved routinely.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does an uncontested divorce take in Ohio? ▼
From starting the document preparation questionnaire to receiving your signed decree, most uncontested Ohio divorces take 4–8 weeks. The timeline is driven by: 2 days for document delivery, your courthouse filing queue, and how quickly both spouses sign all required documents.
What if my spouse is in another state or country? ▼
Distance doesn’t prevent an uncontested divorce. Many states allow acceptance of service by mail or email — your spouse signs the acceptance documents remotely and returns them. As long as the paperwork is signed, the physical location of either spouse during the process doesn’t matter in most cases.
Can we agree to waive spousal support? ▼
Yes. In an uncontested Ohio divorce, both spouses can agree that neither will pay spousal support. Include explicit language to this effect in your Settlement Agreement: ‘Both parties waive any claim for spousal support.’ This waiver is typically permanent once included in the final decree.
What if we own property in multiple states? ▼
The Ohio Court of Common Pleas has jurisdiction over your divorce. However, real property located in another state must be handled according to that state’s laws for the title transfer. Your Settlement Agreement should address all properties — but you may need a Quitclaim Deed or other transfer document recorded in the other state’s county where the property is located.
Do we need a lawyer to review our Settlement Agreement? ▼
You’re not required to have an attorney review your Settlement Agreement in {name}. However, many people use ‘limited scope representation’ — paying an attorney for a one-time review ($200–$500) without hiring them for full representation. This can catch ambiguous language or missing provisions that might cause problems later.
What’s the difference between this and the ‘How to File for Divorce in Ohio Without a Lawyer’ guide? ▼
Both guides cover the same core process — the difference is focus. This guide emphasizes the specific forms, fee breakdown, and property division rules unique to uncontested cases. The pro se guide covers a broader range of situations including what to do if your spouse is uncooperative or won’t sign. If your case is straightforwardly uncontested, start here.
Affiliate Disclosure: Noble Notary may earn a commission when you purchase through links in this article at no additional cost to you. OnlineDivorce.com charges $199 regardless of referral source.
Legal Disclaimer: Noble Notary is a licensed document preparation company, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For complex or contested situations, consult a licensed Ohio family law attorney. Noble Notary & Legal Document Preparers · 1736 Spottswoode Ct., Port Orange, FL 32128 · (321) 283-6452
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