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Home·Practice Areas· Divorce: Uncontested

Uncontested Divorce Process in Allegheny County

When both spouses agree on all terms, divorce in Pennsylvania can be completed in 4–6 months. Here is exactly how the mutual consent process works step by step.

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What Is an Uncontested Divorce?

When Both Spouses Agree on All Terms

An uncontested divorce — also called a mutual consent divorce under Section 3301(c) — is the fastest and least expensive path to divorce in Pennsylvania. It is available when both spouses agree the marriage is irretrievably broken and all economic issues have been resolved (or waived). After a 90-day waiting period from service, both parties execute Affidavits of Consent, and the final divorce decree can be entered.

Requirements: both parties consent to the divorce, complete agreement on all issues — property, custody, support — or waiver of claims, 90-day separation period after service of complaint, and all financial disclosures complete.


Step-by-Step Process

How Uncontested Divorce Works in Allegheny County

1
File Complaint in Divorce — Current filing fee: $191.75 plus $45.25 for additional counts. Filed at the Allegheny County Department of Court Records.
2
Serve Your Spouse — By process server, certified mail, or through their attorney. The 90-day clock starts from the date of service, not the date of filing.
3
Resolve All Economic Issues — If there are assets, debts, support, or custody issues, a Marital Settlement Agreement should be executed before the 90-day period ends if possible.
4
Execute Affidavits of Consent — Both parties sign Affidavits of Consent after the 90-day period has elapsed.
5
File Praecipe to Transmit the Record — The final step transmitting the file to the court for entry of the divorce decree.
Final Divorce Decree Entered — Typically 4–6 months total from filing to decree in uncomplicated cases.

A Note on "Uncontested"

When Uncontested Becomes Contested

An uncontested divorce can become contested if agreement breaks down on any economic issue before the decree is entered. The most common trigger: the parties thought they agreed on the marital home, then could not agree on the value, the buyout amount, or who assumes the mortgage. Having a complete, written Marital Settlement Agreement — not just a verbal understanding — before initiating the consent process is the difference between a smooth uncontested divorce and one that derails.

Even in uncontested divorces, having an attorney review the Marital Settlement Agreement before you sign is worth the cost. The agreement governs your finances for years. The cost of reviewing it is small compared to the cost of discovering a problem after the decree is entered.

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Pursuing an Uncontested Divorce?

Even uncontested divorces benefit from proper documentation and agreement review. Attorney Levine handles these matters directly — first call is free.

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