Divorce Filing Fee Calculator

Find divorce court filing fees for all 50 states, calculate total court costs, and check if you may qualify for a fee waiver.

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Minimum Filing Costs — California
$510
Petition Filing Fee
$435
Process Service Fee
$75
Total Minimum
$510
Fees shown are approximate. Actual fees vary by county and case type. Check your local court's website for exact current fees.
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Advanced Calculator

All 50 states comparison chart showing highest and lowest filing fees, plus additional court costs breakdown by category.

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California
$435
Filing fee (petitioner)
Texas
$300
Filing fee (petitioner)
California is $135 more expensive than Texas for filing fees.
California$435
Florida$409
Minnesota$400
Illinois$388
Connecticut$360
Louisiana$350
Arizona$349
New York$335
Utah$318
Washington$314
Mississippi$52
North Dakota$80
District of Columbia$80
Virginia$86
Vermont$90
South Dakota$95
Wyoming$100
Rhode Island$120
Maine$120
Kentucky$120
* Fees vary by county. Verify with your local court clerk. Data: 2024.
Professional Simulator

Full court cost analysis with motion fees, service fees, certified copies, QDRO fees, and detailed fee waiver eligibility analysis based on your income.

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Total Court Filing & Fee Costs
$1,465
Base Filing Fees$870
Motions & Orders$385
Documents & QDRO$210
Both Parties Total$1,465

How the Filing Fee Calculator Works

Every divorce requires at minimum a court filing fee paid to the clerk of court when the petition is filed. These fees vary substantially by state — from under $100 in some states to over $400 in others — and can vary further by county within a state.

What the filing fee covers

The filing fee covers the court's administrative cost of opening your case, processing paperwork, and assigning a judge. It does not cover attorney fees, process server fees, or any subsequent filings. Most divorces incur additional fees for motions, certified copies, and the final judgment entry.

Process service fees

After filing, your spouse must be formally served with divorce papers. This can be done by a sheriff's deputy ($50–$100), a private process server ($75–$150), or waived if your spouse signs an Acceptance of Service acknowledging receipt. This eliminates the service fee entirely.

Fee waivers

Every state allows low-income filers to apply for an In Forma Pauperis (IFP) waiver of court fees. Eligibility is typically based on income being at or below 125–200% of the federal poverty line. Ask the clerk for the fee waiver application form.

State Filing Fee Reference

Minimum Divorce Cost = Filing Fee + Service Fee Additional costs may include: • Response Filing Fee (if spouse files response) • Motion fees ($40–$200 each) • Hearing/trial fees • Judgment/order entry fee ($30–$100) • Certified copy fees ($10–$25 each)

Note: Filing fees shown are approximate and current as of 2025. Fees change periodically. Always verify the current fee with your local court clerk before filing.

Real-World Example

Example — California Uncontested Divorce Filing Costs

Lisa files for divorce in Los Angeles County, California. Her spouse signs an Acceptance of Service, so no process server is needed.

Petition for Dissolution (FL-100)$435
Process service (waived — spouse signed)$0
Response filing (FL-120)$435
Judgment entry fee$0
Certified copies (3)$75
Total court costs$945

By having her spouse voluntarily sign the Acceptance of Service and waiving a separate process server, Lisa saved $75. The total court cost of $945 is the only mandatory expense for an uncontested divorce handled without attorneys.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Every state has a process to waive court fees for low-income filers. Ask the court clerk for an "Application for Waiver of Court Fees and Costs" (sometimes called "In Forma Pauperis" or IFP). You'll need to disclose your income, expenses, and assets. If approved, all court fees — including filing fees and motion fees — are waived or deferred.
If your spouse chooses to file a formal Response to the divorce petition, they will pay a response filing fee — usually similar to the initial filing fee. However, in many uncontested divorces the spouse doesn't file a formal response; they simply sign an Acceptance of Service and any settlement agreements, avoiding that fee.
Filing fees are set by each state's legislature and reflect the cost of operating the court system in that state. Higher-cost states (California, Florida, Minnesota) tend to have higher fees. Some states also add surcharges for specific programs like domestic violence prevention. Fees also vary by county within a state.
Yes. If your spouse is cooperative, they can sign an "Acceptance of Service" or "Waiver of Service" form, acknowledging they received the divorce papers. This completely eliminates the need for formal service and the associated fee. If your spouse is uncooperative or cannot be located, you may need a private process server or, as a last resort, service by publication in a newspaper.
States with the lowest filing fees include North Dakota (~$80), Wyoming (~$90), South Dakota (~$95), Virginia (~$86), and Maine (~$120). However, to file in a state you must meet that state's residency requirement — typically 6–12 months of living there. You cannot simply travel to another state to file cheaply.

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