No Fault Divorce in Florida
What does "no fault" divorce really mean?
It means a great deal. It means that in order to get a divorce in Florida, you do not have to prove that your spouse is guilty of some kind of wrong. You don't have to prove that your spouse was unfaithful to you, injured you or your children in some way or was at fault in any other way before you can ask for a divorce. Thus, Florida is a "no fault" state.
What is the only ground for divorce in Florida, therefore?
That the marriage is "irretrievably broken."(1) All you have to allege in your divorce papers (your Petition for Dissolution of Marriage) is that your marriage is irretrievably broken. As proof of this fact, husbands and wives often say that their marriage is irretrievably broken because there is no love left in the marriage, there are constant arguments, there is absolute marital disharmony and marriage counseling would not put the marriage back together again.
(1) Under certain circumstances, Florida also permits a person to file for divorce when the "mental incapacity" of one of the parties is alleged in the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.
Do No Fault Divorce Laws Make Securing Divorces Easier?
Yes! Floridians understand that it is far easier to get a divorce in a "no fault" state than in one where a spouse has to prove the other spouses is "at fault" in some way before the court could grant a divorce.