Start your Online Divorce
Existing Customer Login-
Complete our simple online questionnaire
Provide information about your marriage and dissolution by simply answering questions on our website.
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Review Completed Vermont Forms
Get the ready-to-file forms and we provide instructions on what to do next. Perform your DIY divorce with ease.
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File the Documents
File the divorce papers in a courthouse or online. Notify your spouse about the divorce proceedings.
How It Works
It takes just 3 easy steps to file for divorce.
Benefits of Our Service
Paperwork is a crucial part of any uncontested divorce case, and VermontDivorceForAll.com strives to
make this process as seamless as possible. We provide our users with an affordable way to get all the required
printable divorce forms completed in two business days.
For only $139, you can take advantage of all the VermontDivorceForAll.com
benefits, including:
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A court-acceptance guarantee for all forms created on our platform or your money back
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Detailed instructions on how to file for divorce yourself
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Review your answers and make changes anytime
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A full package of divorce filings
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Receive completed forms in your email within 2 business days
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Substantial savings on the services of a lawyer
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Paperwork preparation from the comfort of your home
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Attentive customer support service
About Vermont Divorce For All
710
expedited cases
93%
happy customers
3200
clients served
9
years of experience
14
counties served
1000+
members of the US Armed Forces served
Valid Grounds for Divorce in
Vermont State
The divorce rate in Vermont is 2.8 cases per thousand inhabitants.
Vermont family law allows filing for divorce on both fault-based and no-fault grounds. The only no-fault ground is living apart for six consecutive months. If a petitioner alleges a fault divorce, they must prove that the second spouse's wrongdoing caused the marriage breakdown.
In Vermont, the fault-based grounds include:
•adultery;
•sentence of imprisonment for three years or more;
•intolerable severity in either party;
•willful desertion/when a spouse has been absent and not heard from for seven years;
•neglect/not providing proper support for the other spouse while being able to do so.
Permanent incapacity due to psychiatric disability can also become a ground for divorce, provided that the incapacitated spouse has been confined in a psychiatric hospital for at least five years before the divorce is filed.