Alaska Divorce Guide
What you need to know to file for an uncontested divorce in Alaska.
Simplified divorce may be available
Alaska offers a summary or simplified dissolution for couples who qualify — typically short marriages (under 5 years), no minor children, limited assets and debts, and both parties agree. This process uses fewer forms and may be faster. Ask the court clerk if you qualify before filing the standard petition.
Key facts for Alaska
No residency requirement. Equitable distribution. Online dissolution available for uncontested cases.
Step-by-step: filing in Alaska
- 1
Meet the Alaska residency requirement
Alaska has no residency requirement — you can file immediately without having lived here for a set period.
- 2
Reach agreement on all terms
For an uncontested divorce, you and your spouse must agree on how to divide property and debts, any spousal support, and — if you have children — custody and child support arrangements. Getting this in writing before filing will speed up the process significantly.
- 3
Gather financial documents
Collect recent pay stubs, bank and investment account statements, mortgage or lease documents, retirement account statements, vehicle titles, and any business ownership records. You will likely be required to file a financial disclosure.
- 4
Complete the divorce petition and required forms
Download the Alaska divorce petition (and summons) from your county court website or the court self-help center. Fill out all required forms accurately. If you have a settlement agreement, prepare that document as well. A simplified summary dissolution may be available if your marriage was short and you have limited assets and no children — ask the clerk.
- 5
File with the Alaska court clerk
Take your completed forms to the county clerk's office and pay the $150 filing fee (approximately — fees vary by county). Keep copies of everything stamped by the clerk. E-filing is available in Alaska, which may allow you to file online without visiting the courthouse.
- 6
Serve your spouse
Your spouse must be formally served with the divorce papers. Options typically include sheriff service, a process server, or — if your spouse signs an Acceptance of Service — you may avoid formal service. Your spouse then has a set number of days to respond.
- 7
No mandatory waiting period in Alaska
Alaska does not impose a mandatory waiting period for uncontested divorces. Once your paperwork is filed and served, the court can move quickly to schedule your final hearing.
- 8
Attend the final hearing (or submit by default)
In uncontested cases, the final hearing is often brief — sometimes just a few minutes. A judge reviews your agreement and issues the final decree of divorce. Some counties allow a default judgment by written declaration, skipping the hearing entirely for uncontested cases. Once signed, your divorce is final.
Court self-help center
Alaska courts offer self-help centers where staff can answer procedural questions, provide forms, and review your paperwork for completeness — though they cannot give legal advice. Search “Alaska court self-help center” or check your county court's website for hours and location.