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Michigan Divorce 180-Day Waiting Period: Rules and Waiver

Michigan Divorce 180-Day Waiting Period: Rules and Waiver

Michigan imposes mandatory waiting periods between the filing of a divorce complaint and the entry of a final judgment. The length depends entirely on whether the couple has minor children:

  • With minor children (under 18): 180-day waiting period
  • Without minor children: 60-day waiting period

These are statutory minimums. The court cannot finalize your divorce before this period expires, regardless of how quickly you and your spouse reach agreement on every issue.

Why the Waiting Period Exists

Michigan's waiting period serves two legislative purposes:

  1. Reconciliation window: The state provides time for couples to potentially reconcile before the divorce becomes permanent
  2. Child protection: The longer 180-day period for families with children gives courts and the Friend of the Court time to evaluate custody arrangements, establish temporary support orders, and ensure children's interests are protected

The waiting period begins on the day the complaint is filed with the circuit court — not the day your spouse is served, not the day they respond, and not the day you reach a settlement agreement.

Can the 180-Day Period Be Shortened?

Yes, but only in limited circumstances. Under MCL § 552.9f, a judge can reduce the 180-day waiting period to a floor of 60 days if the plaintiff demonstrates "unusual hardship or compelling necessity."

Courts have granted waivers in situations involving:

  • Documented domestic violence with protective orders in place
  • A spouse who is terminally ill and needs to resolve estate planning before death
  • Military deployment where delay would cause severe financial or logistical hardship
  • Situations where the delay itself endangers a child

A waiver is not routine. Simply wanting the divorce finalized faster, or having already reached a complete settlement agreement, is not sufficient grounds. You must file a motion specifically requesting the reduction and provide evidence of hardship.

What Happens During the Waiting Period

The waiting period is not dead time. Michigan's procedural timeline fills this window with critical steps:

First 28 days: Exchange of SCAO CC 320 Verified Financial Information Forms (mandatory financial disclosure)

Ongoing: Friend of the Court (FOC) involvement if children are present — temporary custody recommendations, parenting time evaluations, temporary support calculations

Throughout: Discovery (interrogatories, document requests), settlement negotiations, mediation sessions, appraisals and valuations of assets

Near the end: Settlement conference or trial scheduling. If you've reached agreement, the consent judgment can be signed the day the waiting period expires.

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Using the Time Strategically

For financial split purposes, the waiting period is your window to:

  1. Complete financial disclosure — gather all documents for the CC 320 and supplemental discovery
  2. Get appraisals — home, business interests, and any significant personal property
  3. Obtain pension/retirement valuations — request plan statements and consider actuarial analysis
  4. Draft the QDRO/EDRO — retirement account division orders can be prepared during this time for immediate filing after judgment
  5. Negotiate the settlement — work through mediation or direct negotiation to resolve property, debt, and support issues
  6. Establish temporary orders — if needed, request temporary spousal support or mortgage payment responsibility during the waiting period

The 60-Day Period (No Children)

If you have no minor children, the 60-day minimum applies. This is not reducible further — 60 days is the absolute floor in Michigan, with no waiver provision for childless couples.

Many simple divorces with no children finalize on or near day 61. However, complex financial cases (business interests, multiple retirement accounts, real estate portfolios) often take longer than 60 days simply because the financial work isn't complete.

Final Judgment Timing

The waiting period is a minimum, not a maximum. After the period expires, your divorce is finalized only when:

  • Both parties sign a consent judgment (if uncontested), OR
  • The court holds a trial and the judge enters a judgment (if contested)

A settlement that isn't fully documented and ready to sign on day 60 or 180 simply means the case continues beyond the minimum period until resolution.

Making the Most of This Window

The Michigan Divorce Financial Split Guide provides a timeline-mapped checklist that breaks the 60 or 180-day window into specific action items — what to gather in the first two weeks, what to negotiate in weeks 3-8, and what must be finalized before the settlement conference — so you use the mandatory waiting period productively rather than losing months to inaction.

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