Hawaii handles divorce uniformly across the state, including West Hawaii (part of Hawaii Island’s Kona region), through Family Court in the Third Circuit. Decisions prioritize the child’s best interests for custody and aim for equitable outcomes in alimony and support, with no 2026-specific changes noted beyond ongoing protections against domestic abuse.
Child Custody
Hawaii courts award custody based on the child’s best interests, considering factors like parental fitness, stability, and child preferences if mature enough. Joint custody is common if feasible; sole custody requires proof one parent is unfit or harmful. Mediation is standard but waived for domestic violence allegations per recent bills.
Alimony (Spousal Support)
Alimony is not automatic and depends on need, ability to pay, marriage length, and standard of living. Types include temporary (during divorce), rehabilitative (skill-building), and permanent (rare, long marriages). Courts use guidelines factoring income disparity; awards end on remarriage or cohabitation.
Decision Factors
West Hawaii cases follow statewide equitable distribution: marital property/debts split fairly (not always 50/50), crediting premarital assets. Judges weigh economic circumstances, contributions, and dissipation of assets. Residency requires 6 months in Hawaii, 3 in the county; no-fault grounds like irretrievable breakdown dominate.














