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  1. When a couple wants to end a marriage without having to prove a specific type of wrongful behavior as the cause, the divorce is classified as a no-fault divorce. The person filing the paperwork with the court chooses a no-fault divorce when they submit their documents to the court.
    www.forbes.com/advisor/legal/divorce/no-fault-divorce/
    www.forbes.com/advisor/legal/divorce/no-fault-divorce/
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    These fault grounds include the following: A critical difference between fault and no-fault divorce is that spouses filing a fault-based divorce are not typically required to live apart for a period of time before filing. Establishing fault can result in a larger distribution of marital property in some states.
    www.findlaw.com/family/divorce/an-overview-of-no-fault …
    When a couple wants to end a marriage without having to prove a specific type of wrongful behavior as the cause, the divorce is classified as a no-fault divorce. The person filing the paperwork with the court chooses a no-fault divorce when they submit their documents to the court.
    www.forbes.com/advisor/legal/divorce/no-fault-divorce/
    Other states allow only no-fault divorce. The main difference between fault-based and no-fault divorce is that in a fault-based divorce, one of the spouses claims that something the other did caused the marriage to fall apart. In a no-fault divorce, on the other hand, neither spouse needs to allege a bad act on the part of the other.
    www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/no-fault-divorce-vs-fau…
    Increased alimony or spousal support, and a larger share of the marital property, make a fault-based divorce more attractive to some people. Unlike a no-fault divorce, a spouse can object to a fault-based divorce. Through the no-fault divorce process, the spouse must disprove fault by presenting a defense. These are common fault divorce defenses:
    www.findlaw.com/family/divorce/an-overview-of-no-fault …
  3. What Is A No Fault Divorce? – Forbes Advisor

  4. No-fault divorce - Wikipedia

  5. A history of no-fault divorce in the US | CNN

  6. What is no-fault divorce? | LegalZoom

  7. Fault and No-Fault Divorce: An Overview - FindLaw

  8. No-Fault Divorce: A Solution
    No-fault divorce lets couples end their marriage without blaming each other for the breakdown
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  9. Are you eligible for no-fault divorce? A checklist | LegalZoom

  10. Fault vs. No-Fault Divorce | Nolo

  11. How to File for an Uncontested or No Fault Divorce

  12. no-fault divorce | Wex | US Law | LII / Legal Information Institute

  13. Why are Americans fighting over no-fault divorce? Maybe they …