How Do I Get Divorced?

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The only way to get divorced in Canada is by a Supreme Court order, and to get this order you have to start a court proceeding. (Only married spouses need to get divorced; the relationships of unmarried spouses are over when they separate.)

You must have lived in the province in which you are starting the court proceeding for at least one year before the Supreme Court in that province can issue you a divorce order. But once you've been in that province for at least a year, the court can issue an order for divorce no matter where you were married. You must start your court proceeding in the Supreme Court. Judges in the Provincial Court do not have the jurisdiction to issue orders for divorce.

The court proceeding can include other claims in addition to a divorce order. Typically people also ask for orders about the care of children, the payment of child support and spousal support, and the division of property and debt. It is a good idea for you and your spouse to reach an agreement about how you will divide your property before you apply for a divorce order. This is for two reasons:

  1. Before you are divorced (and while you are still married spouses), you can take advantage of tax rules that allow spouses to share property as a result of separation, e.g. RRSP rollovers.
  2. After you get a divorce order, and if you still have outstanding claims you want to make to divide property, you only have two years to file those claims.

A lot of people make efficient use of uncontested divorce applications, especially when they've resolved issues relating to children and money, they both live in the same province, and the only loose end is getting that divorce order. If this sounds like your situation, check out the Ministry of Attorney General's Online Divorce Assistant. You can also visit Legal Aid BC's Family Law Website's helpful guides on doing your own uncontested divorce.

However, you'll be in for a fight if you and your spouse don't agree about the orders the court should make. Keep that in mind, as the following discussion assumes that the only order anyone is asking for is a divorce order.

Forms and documents involved[edit]

Note that only some of these forms will apply, and this will depend on whether there are children, and whether a sole or joint claim is involved.

  • Marriage Certificate,
  • Registration of Divorce Proceedings, which you fill out online then print to bring to the Supreme Court registry,
  • Form F3 Notice of Family Claim or F1 Notice of Joint Family Claim, depending on whether you're filing jointly with your spouse, or on your own,
  • Form F15 Affidavit of Personal Service, if you're doing it on your own since you need to prove your spouse has been served and has had the opportunity to respond,
  • Form F35 Requisition (Divorce),
  • Form F17 Requisition (General),
  • Form F38 Affidavit Desk Order Divorce,
  • Form F37 Child Support Affidavit, if applicable,
  • Form F36 Certificate of Pleadings, and
  • Form F52 Final Order.

Begin the court proceeding[edit]

You will need to file a Notice of Family Claim in Form F3, and attach Schedule 1. Schedule 1 gives the court the information it needs to make the divorce order. (A special Notice of Joint Family Claim in Form F1 is used when a couple is asking for the divorce together.) There is a $210 filing fee.

You will be required to file an original copy of your marriage certificate with your Notice of Family Claim. This is the ugly brown document you got from the government, not the flowery thing you received from your officiant. The Supreme Court will not accept a photocopy. If you cannot locate your original marriage certificate, you can obtain an original copy from BC's Vital Statistic Agency for $50 using their Online Certificate Ordering System.

You will also be required to fill out a Registration of Divorce Proceeding form. This form must be completed using the online form, printed off (do not complete it by hand), and submitted to the court registry with your Notice of Family Claim. The court staff will send this document with your original marriage certificate off to the Central Registry of Divorce Proceedings in Ottawa.

Serve your spouse[edit]

Next, have your spouse personally served with a copy of the filed Notice of Family Claim. You can't do this yourself; you must get someone at least 19 years or older to do it for you. The person who serves your spouse, often called a process server, will need to swear an Affidavit of Personal Service in Form F15 to prove the time and fact that service was done. (Couples who are filing the Joint Notice of Family Claim together don't need to have anyone served.)

Wait[edit]

Your spouse has 30 days to defend your claim. What you hope is that your spouse won't file a Response to Family Claim or Counterclaim, because if this happens you're going to have to settle your differences or deal with a trial. (Couples who are filing the Joint Notice of Family Claim together don't need to wait.)

Apply for the divorce order[edit]

Once the 30 days are up, you will need to pay an $80 fee and file the following documents:

  1. a Requisition in Form F35 asking for the divorce order,
  2. a Requisition in Form F17 asking the court staff to search for a Response to Family Claim or Counterclaim,
  3. the Affidavit of Personal Service your process server prepared,
  4. a special affidavit in Form F38 giving the court the evidence it needs from you about the reason for your requested divorce, to make the divorce order,
  5. if there are children, a Child Support Affidavit in Form F37 giving the court the evidence it needs from you to conclude that appropriate arrangements have been made for the support of the children (satisfactory child support payment arrangements in particular),
  6. a blank Registrar's Certificate in Form F36, and
  7. a draft divorce order in Form F52.

Couples who are filing the Joint Notice of Family Claim together can file these documents, without the Affidavit of Personal Service, as soon as they've filed their Notice of Family Claim.

Wait[edit]

It can take anywhere from 60 to 120 days for the court staff and a judge to process your divorce application. Start calling the court registry at the 60-day mark to see if your order is ready.

Pick up your divorce order[edit]

When your order is ready, head down to the court registry and pick it up. You must then send a copy of the order to your spouse. Congratulations! 31 days from the date the order is made, you'll be divorced. If you wish to obtain a Certificate of Divorce, you can request one in person at the registry where you filed your desk divorce and receive it for a $40 fee, or request and receive it by mail for $50.

For more information[edit]

The chapter on Separating and Getting Divorced within the section Divorce and the Law on Getting Divorced.

This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by Shannon Beebe, 24 September, 2023.



JP Boyd on Family Law © John-Paul Boyd and Courthouse Libraries BC is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada Licence.