$0 Wyoming — Divorce Filing Quick-Start Checklist

Best Wyoming Divorce Toolkit for Uncontested Filing

If you and your spouse agree on everything — property, debts, custody if applicable — and you want the cheapest, most reliable way to file an uncontested divorce in Wyoming, a state-specific filing process guide gives you the best return per dollar. Wyoming's official forms are free. Attorneys cost $1,500–$5,000 for even simple dissolutions. Online document services charge $137–$499 to fill out those same free forms. A process guide slots into the gap: it gives you the chronological filing sequence, deadline trackers, and county-specific instructions for a fraction of any alternative.

What "Uncontested" Actually Means in Wyoming

An uncontested divorce in Wyoming means both spouses agree on all terms: grounds for divorce (irreconcilable differences under Wyo. Stat. § 20-2-104), property division, debt allocation, spousal support, and — if children are involved — custody, parenting time, and child support. The court doesn't need to decide anything. It reviews your agreed terms and either approves the Decree or asks for modifications.

The catch: "agreeing on everything" and "filing correctly" are two completely different problems. Most uncontested filers agree on terms but get tripped up by the procedural sequence — missed deadlines, county-specific rules, or disclosure requirements they didn't know existed.

What a Good Wyoming Divorce Toolkit Covers

Feature Why It Matters for Uncontested Filing
Chronological filing sequence Know exactly which form to file, in what order, starting from the Complaint through the final Decree
90-day service deadline tracking Even in an agreed divorce, formal service is required — and missing the 90-day window means automatic dismissal
County finalization map Some Wyoming counties let you finalize entirely on paper; others require an in-person hearing with oral testimony
Financial disclosure checklist Both spouses must exchange Initial Disclosures and file a notarized Confidential Financial Affidavit within 30 days — even if you've already agreed on who gets what
Settlement agreement guidance The written agreement must meet specific statutory requirements to be incorporated into the Decree
Child support worksheets Wyoming uses the Income Shares Model — you need to calculate correctly or the court will send it back
Fee waiver instructions If filing fees ($120–$160) are a burden, the Affidavit of Indigency process (Packet 10) can eliminate them

The Options Compared

Free state forms (wyocourts.gov): Wyoming publishes free Packet 3 (no children) and Packet 4 (with children). The forms are solid. The instructions tell you what each document is but not when to file it, how the deadlines chain together, or what your county's specific finalization process looks like. Court clerks are legally prohibited from giving procedural guidance.

Online document services ($137–$499): DivorceWriter and 3StepDivorce fill in those same free forms through a questionnaire. They handle the form-filling but not the filing sequence, deadline tracking, or county-specific rules. You still need to figure out the procedural path on your own.

Attorneys ($1,500–$5,000+): Full-service representation handles everything, but for an uncontested divorce where everything is agreed, you're paying several thousand dollars for a process you can handle yourself with proper instructions. Wyoming's rural counties often have few local family law attorneys, making this option both expensive and logistically difficult.

Wyoming Divorce Filing Process Guide: The Wyoming filing process guide provides a 17-chapter roadmap covering every phase from residency verification through post-decree actions, plus 8 standalone printable worksheets. It costs — less than one hour of the average Wyoming attorney's $150–$360/hour billing rate.

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Who This Is For

  • Couples who agree on all terms and want to file without an attorney
  • Filers who are comfortable handling their own paperwork but need a clear procedural roadmap
  • People in rural Wyoming counties where finding a local family law attorney is difficult
  • Budget-conscious filers who want to keep total costs under $200 (filing fee + guide)
  • Parents who've agreed on custody but need help with the child support calculation and parenting plan requirements

Who This Is NOT For

  • Couples who disagree on property division, custody, or support (contested divorce requires legal representation or mediation)
  • Cases involving domestic violence, substance abuse, or significant power imbalances (seek professional legal help)
  • People who want someone else to manage every step (consider a full-service attorney or managed divorce platform)
  • High-asset divorces with business interests, real estate portfolios, or retirement accounts requiring QDROs (you need a financial specialist)

Common Mistakes Uncontested Filers Make

Skipping formal service. Even when your spouse agrees to everything, Wyoming law requires formal service of process — or a signed Acknowledgment and Acceptance of Service. Filing the Complaint without properly serving your spouse means the case can't move forward, and the 90-day clock is ticking.

Missing the disclosure deadline. Both parties must complete Initial Disclosures and the Confidential Financial Affidavit within 30 days of the answer deadline. This applies even in fully agreed cases. Miss it and the court can sanction you or delay the case.

Not checking your county's finalization path. If you assume your county allows paper finalization and it actually requires a hearing, you'll be caught off guard when the court schedules you for an in-person appearance. Check before you file.

Using outdated custody information. Several prominent legal websites incorrectly state that Wyoming has a presumption of shared custody. Both legislative bills (SF0117 and SF0093) died in committee, and the Wyoming Supreme Court in Smith v. Smith (2025 WY 128) confirmed no presumption exists.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does an uncontested divorce take in Wyoming?

Wyoming has a 20-day mandatory waiting period between filing the Complaint and entry of the Decree. In practice, uncontested divorces typically take 30–90 days total depending on how quickly you complete service, disclosures, and finalization — and whether your county requires a hearing.

Do I need to appear in court for an uncontested divorce in Wyoming?

It depends on your county. Some Wyoming District Courts allow uncontested divorces to finalize entirely on paper through the Affidavit for Divorce Without Appearance of Parties. Others require the Plaintiff to appear, deliver oral testimony, and have the judge sign the Decree in person.

Can I file an uncontested divorce with children in Wyoming?

Yes, but you'll use Packet 4 instead of Packet 3, and you'll need additional documents: a parenting plan, child support calculation worksheets, and — if you have children under 17 — proof of completing a mandatory parent education class.

What's the cheapest way to get an uncontested divorce in Wyoming?

The lowest-cost path: download free forms from wyocourts.gov, use a process guide for the filing sequence, and handle the paperwork yourself. Total cost: the filing fee ($120–$160, waivable if you qualify) plus the guide. That's typically under $200 all-in.

Is Wyoming a community property or equitable distribution state?

Wyoming follows equitable distribution, meaning the court divides marital property fairly — not necessarily equally. Wyoming is also an "all-property" state, meaning the court can consider both marital and separate property when making the division. In an uncontested filing, you and your spouse agree on the split in your Settlement Agreement, and the court reviews it for fairness.

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