HomeBlogMy Spouse Wants a Divorce and I Don't: What Are My Options?

My Spouse Wants a Divorce and I Don't: What Are My Options?

Your spouse told you they want a divorce. You don't. You are reading this because you are trying to figure out whether you can stop it, slow it down, or at l...

Clarity Divorce TeamApril 16, 202610 min read

My Spouse Wants a Divorce and I Don't: What Are My Options?

Your spouse told you they want a divorce. You don't. You are reading this because you are trying to figure out whether you can stop it, slow it down, or at least understand what just happened to your life.

Here is the honest answer up front. Arizona is a no-fault divorce state. Under A.R.S. § 25-312, if one spouse tells the court the marriage is irretrievably broken, the court will eventually grant the divorce. You cannot force your spouse to stay married to you. But you do have real options, and you have more power over the outcome than you probably feel right now.

This guide is for the person who did not see this coming, or who saw it coming and hoped it would pass. It walks through what Arizona law actually allows, what you can and cannot stop, and what to do next.

Can I legally stop the divorce?

No. Not if your spouse is determined to go through with it.

Arizona does not require both spouses to agree to a divorce. The legal standard for ending a marriage is that one spouse says it is "irretrievably broken." That is it. There is no requirement to prove fault, infidelity, abuse, or anything else. The judge does not weigh whether you want the marriage to continue.

This is hard to accept. Many people in your position spend weeks looking for a legal angle that does not exist. Save yourself that exhausting search. Your energy is better spent on the parts of the outcome that you can shape.

The one narrow exception is covenant marriage. A small percentage of Arizona marriages are formal covenant marriages under A.R.S. § 25-903, which have stricter grounds for divorce. If you are not sure whether you have a covenant marriage, you almost certainly do not. Covenant marriage is a separate election made at the time of marriage and rarely chosen.

What can I actually do right now?

A few things, and they matter more than they might feel like.

Read what was filed. If your spouse has served you with a petition, read it carefully. Note what they are asking for in terms of property division, parenting time if you have children, child support, and spousal maintenance. The petition is not the final order. It is your spouse's opening request.

Track your response deadline. If you live in Arizona, you have 20 days from the date you were served to file a response. If you were served out of state, you have 30 days. Missing this deadline can mean a default judgment against you on your spouse's terms. This is the single most important practical step.

Gather your financial records. Bank statements, retirement accounts, mortgage paperwork, credit card statements, tax returns from the last few years, pay stubs, anything that shows what you and your spouse have and what you owe. Both spouses are required to disclose this information later anyway, but having it organized early protects you.

Decide whether you want to fight or finish. This is the hardest question. You may not be able to stop the divorce, but you can choose how you go through it. Fighting every issue makes the process longer, more expensive, and harder on everyone, especially children. Finishing well means engaging with the process, advocating for what you need, and not dragging out a marriage that is already over from your spouse's side.

What is conciliation court and should I use it?

Arizona offers something most people in your position have never heard of. Under A.R.S. § 25-381.09, either spouse can petition for conciliation services. When you file the petition, the divorce is paused for 60 days while the couple attends a conciliation conference, usually with a court-affiliated counselor.

Your spouse cannot refuse to attend. They have to show up. That is one of the few legal levers you have if you genuinely believe the marriage might be saved with help.

A few honest notes about conciliation:

It is not couples therapy. It is a structured conversation, often a single session, designed to assess whether the marriage can be reconciled.

It does not require your spouse to want to reconcile. They can attend, say they are done, and the divorce continues after the 60 days.

It can give you real information. If your spouse goes through conciliation and still wants to divorce, you have your answer in a way that is hard to argue with.

If you want to use this option, you have to act early. Talk to the Superior Court in your county about how to file a petition for conciliation services.

What if I just don't respond?

This feels like an option. It is not a good one.

If you do not file a response within the deadline, your spouse can request a default judgment. The court can then grant the divorce on the terms your spouse requested. Property gets divided the way they asked. Parenting plans get set the way they proposed. Support gets ordered or not ordered based on what they wrote in the petition.

Refusing to engage does not stop the divorce. It only removes you from the negotiation about how the divorce ends.

The same is true of dragging your feet, refusing to sign anything, or hoping your spouse will change their mind. Arizona courts can grant a divorce without your cooperation. They will. You are choosing whether to be in the room when the terms are decided.

Free Arizona Divorce Checklist

Download our 4-page checklist covering every form, deadline, and filing requirement for an Arizona divorce. Includes a cost breakdown and step-by-step instructions.

  • All 7 official court forms listed
  • County filing fees
  • Cost breakdown
  • Post-divorce checklist

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

What if we have kids?

If you have minor children, the court will issue legal decision-making (custody) and parenting time orders as part of the divorce. Arizona courts apply A.R.S. § 25-403, which weighs the best interests of the child across a list of factors that include each parent's relationship with the child, the child's adjustment to home and school, and the wishes of the parents.

You have the same standing as your spouse on these issues. The court does not penalize the parent who did not want the divorce. What matters is the parenting history, the child's needs, and what each parent is proposing going forward.

If you are hoping the kids will keep your spouse from going through with the divorce, that is not how the court will see it. Children are not a reason to deny a divorce. They are the reason both parents have to handle it well.

For more on what to think through before any of this is final, see . It applies to respondents too.

Do I need a lawyer?

It depends on the situation.

You probably need an attorney if any of these are true:

Your spouse has hidden or moved significant assets.

There is a history of abuse or coercive control.

Your spouse is represented by an aggressive attorney and is asking for terms that look unfair.

There is a contested custody dispute.

There is significant business, professional practice, or complex retirement valuation involved.

You probably do not need a full attorney engagement if:

The divorce is mostly uncontested. You disagree on the divorce itself but agree on the major terms.

You and your spouse can communicate civilly about property and parenting.

The financial picture is straightforward.

For uncontested or low-conflict cases, document preparation services handle the paperwork side. prepares all required Arizona court documents for a flat fee of $199, separate from the court filing fees of about $300 to $400. That is true whether you are the petitioner or the respondent. We are not a law firm and we do not give legal advice. We help you complete the forms correctly so you can engage with the process without paying attorney rates for paperwork.

If you want to see what the document preparation flow looks like before you commit, .

What about the emotional side?

You are grieving a future you thought you had. That is real, and it does not get fixed by paperwork or legal strategy.

A few things that help:

Get one outside person who knows the full picture. A therapist, a clergy member, a trusted friend who can hear you without panicking or pushing you toward a particular outcome. Carrying this alone makes everything worse.

Do not make permanent decisions in the first month. You will be tempted. Wait if you can.

Stop reading texts and emails for evidence. Many people in your position spiral by re-reading every message looking for proof of what went wrong. It does not help and it keeps the wound open.

Take care of the body. Sleep, food, water, walking. None of it solves anything, but all of it makes the rest of this easier to handle.

If the fear of being alone is what is hardest right now, speaks to that directly.

What if I think we can still work it out?

It happens. Some marriages do reconcile after one spouse files. If you genuinely believe yours might, here is what to do.

Tell your spouse, calmly and once. Not in a long emotional plea. A clear statement that you would like to try to work on the marriage and that you are open to therapy or conciliation. After that, do not pressure. Pressure usually pushes the other person further away.

File a petition for conciliation if your spouse will not engage privately. The 60-day pause and structured conversation may surface what is actually going on.

In parallel, file your response to the divorce petition on time anyway. Hoping for reconciliation does not protect you legally. If your spouse goes through with the divorce, you need to have responded. There is nothing about responding that prevents reconciliation. Many couples have paused or dismissed a divorce after the response was filed.

Where to start with the paperwork

If you have decided to engage with the process, the most useful next step is understanding what an Arizona divorce response actually requires. The forms, the disclosures, the timeline.

A few resources that help:

covers the full process for both petitioner and respondent.

explains what documents are required and how Clarity prepares them.

When you are ready to prepare your own response and required disclosures, handles the paperwork for $199 flat. Court filing fees are separate, around $300 to $400 depending on your county.

You did not ask for any of this. But the process is going to move whether you engage with it or not. The best version of the next year of your life is the one where you stay involved in your own outcome, even when the situation was not your choice.


Educational guidance only — not legal advice.

Skip the paperwork. Let Clarity handle it.

Clarity Divorce fills all 7 official Arizona Supreme Court forms, plus the financial disclosure, for just $199.

Arizona Divorce Checklists

17 step-by-step checklists for every Arizona divorce situation: uncontested, military, with children, and more.

View Checklists