Divorce in Vermont : Child Custody, Alimony, and How the Vermont Decides Your Future

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Divorce in Vermont : Child Custody, Alimony, and How the Vermont Decides Your Future

Vermont courts decide divorce outcomes based on equitable distribution principles, prioritizing the child’s best interests for custody and considering factors like income disparity for alimony. No-fault divorces require six months of separation with no reconciliation likely, while residency demands one year for at least one spouse.​

Child Custody

Courts award parental rights and responsibilities using a “best interests” standard under 15 V.S.A. § 665, evaluating parental fitness, child adjustment, sibling relationships, and any abuse history without presuming maternal preference. Legal custody often splits decision-making, while physical custody favors shared parenting unless evidence shows harm; modifications need substantial change in circumstances.​

Alimony (Spousal Maintenance)

Alimony awards under § 752 consider duration of marriage, parties’ ages, health, income sources, employability, and standard of living, typically short-term for rehabilitative support rather than permanent. Courts divide marital property equitably—not equally—factoring contributions, needs, and liquidity, with no automatic 50/50 split.​

Court Process

Uncontested divorces with stipulations proceed faster via simplified forms, waiving hearings if complete; contested cases involve temporary orders and trials. Parties can resume prior names, and remarriage is immediate post-decree; seek forms from Vermont Judiciary or Legal Services.

[1](https://legislature.vermont.gov/statutes/fullchapter/15/011)
[2](https://www.divorcenet.com/resources/filing-for-divorce/vermont.htm)
[3](https://www.womenslaw.org/laws/vt/divorce)
[4](https://www.middlaw.com/how-to-prepare-for-a-divorce-in-vermont)
[5](https://vtlawhelp.org/roadmap/divorce/step-1)

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