1. Fault-Based Grounds and What They Require
Fault grounds allow you to claim your spouse engaged in specific conduct that justifies ending the marriage. Each ground has its own legal standard and evidentiary burden. Many wives choose fault grounds when they believe the marriage breakdown resulted from their spouse's wrongdoing, and they want that documented in court proceedings.
What Does Adultery Mean As Grounds for Divorce?
Adultery is sexual intercourse between your spouse and another person during the marriage. You must prove this occurred through credible evidence, such as photographs, communications, or testimony from someone with direct knowledge. Courts rarely accept hearsay or circumstantial suspicion alone; the evidence must establish the act with reasonable clarity. This ground can be emotionally difficult to litigate because it requires presenting intimate details in open court or in depositions, which many wives find intrusive.
How Does Cruelty Function As Grounds for Divorce in New York?
Cruelty refers to conduct by your spouse that is so severe it makes it unsafe or improper for you to continue living together. This includes physical abuse, repeated verbal abuse, threats, or patterns of humiliation that damage your physical or mental health. You must show a course of conduct over time, not isolated incidents. Documentation such as medical records, photographs, police reports, or journal entries strengthens your case, and courts in New York County and other venues often scrutinize whether the alleged behavior truly meets the legal threshold of cruelty rather than ordinary marital conflict.
2. No-Fault Grounds and Streamlined Process
New York recognizes two no-fault pathways: divorce based on a separation agreement or on irretrievable breakdown. These grounds eliminate the need to prove wrongdoing, and they often move faster through court. Many wives prefer no-fault grounds to avoid the burden of proving fault and to reduce courtroom conflict, particularly when children are involved.
What Is a Separation Agreement, and How Does It Lead to Divorce?
A separation agreement is a written contract in which both spouses agree to the terms of their divorce, including property division, spousal support, child custody, and child support. Once you have a signed agreement, you can file for divorce without proving fault. The court reviews the agreement to ensure it is fair and complies with New York law. This approach is faster and more private than contested litigation, and you avoid the expense and delay of proving grounds in court.
How Does Irretrievable Breakdown Work As Grounds for Divorce?
Irretrievable breakdown means the marriage has broken down for at least six months and cannot be repaired. Either spouse can assert this ground, and it does not require proof of wrongdoing. You and your spouse both sign a statement affirming the breakdown, or one spouse can file alone if the other does not cooperate. This ground is the simplest path to divorce in New York and avoids the need to litigate fault or negotiate a separation agreement before filing.
3. Comparing Fault and No-Fault Grounds in Practice
Your choice of grounds shapes both the timeline and the evidence you will need to gather. Fault grounds require investigation and documentation; no-fault grounds move faster but require either agreement or a six-month waiting period. In practice, disputes over grounds rarely map neatly onto a single rule, and courts may weigh competing factors depending on the record before them.
| Ground | Proof Required | Timeline | Typical Use |
| Adultery | Sexual intercourse with third party | Contested; 1–2 years | Documented infidelity |
| Cruelty | Pattern of abusive conduct | Contested; 1–2 years | Abuse; safety concerns |
| Abandonment | Spouse left without cause for one year | Contested; 1–2 years | Spouse disappeared or refused to return |
| Separation Agreement | Signed agreement; no fault proof | Uncontested; 3–6 months | Cooperative divorce |
| Irretrievable Breakdown | Six-month separation or joint statement | Uncontested; 3–6 months | Quickest no-fault path |
Why Might I Choose Fault Grounds over No-Fault Options?
Fault grounds can be strategically valuable if you want the court record to reflect your spouse's wrongdoing, particularly in cases involving abuse, infidelity, or abandonment. Some wives believe that fault findings strengthen their position in custody or support disputes, though courts in New York are required to apply statutory factors for those issues regardless of divorce grounds. Fault grounds also allow you to proceed without waiting six months or negotiating a separation agreement. However, fault litigation is more expensive, more public, and more emotionally taxing than no-fault alternatives. As counsel, I often advise clients to weigh whether the emotional and financial cost of proving fault aligns with their actual goals in custody, support, or property division before committing to that path.
4. Strategic Considerations before Filing
Before selecting grounds and filing, you should gather relevant documentation and clarify what outcomes matter most to you.
If you are considering fault grounds, begin organizing evidence now: communications, medical records, photographs, witness contact information, and a timeline of incidents.
If your spouse has already left or you have been separated, document the date and circumstances of separation for no-fault grounds.
Clarify whether custody, support, or property division is your priority, because grounds alone do not determine those outcomes; statutory factors do.
Consider whether you and your spouse might reach a separation agreement, which would eliminate the need to prove grounds and accelerate resolution. If safety is a concern, consult with counsel about protective orders and custody arrangements before filing for divorce.
12 May, 2026









