Start your Online Divorce
Existing Customer Login-
Complete our simple online questionnaire
Provide information about your marriage and dissolution by simply answering questions on our website.
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Review Completed Alaska Forms
Get the ready-to-file forms and we provide instructions on what to do next. Perform your DIY divorce with ease.
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File the Documents
File the divorce papers in a courthouse or online. Notify your spouse about the divorce proceedings.
How It Works
It takes just 3 easy steps to file for divorce.
Benefits of Our Service
AlaskaDivorceForAll.com provides a straightforward and affordable way to get rid of paperwork hassles. Using this website, you can prepare your uncontested divorce papers in only two business days. We will generate all the completed forms required in a particular case, ensuring that the court approves them. For only $139, you can take advantage of the following AlaskaDivorceForAll.com services:
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A court-acceptance guarantee for all forms created on our platform or your money back
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Detailed instructions on how to file for divorce yourself
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Review your answers and make changes anytime
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A full package of divorce filings
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Receive completed forms in your email within 2 business days
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Substantial savings on the services of a lawyer
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Paperwork preparation from the comfort of your home
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Attentive customer support service
About Alaska Divorce For All
710
expedited cases
93%
happy customers
3200
clients served
9
years of experience
20
boroughs & 11 census areas served
1000+
members of the US Armed Forces served
Valid Grounds for Divorce in
Alaska State
The divorce rate in Alaska is 3.6 per thousand inhabitants. Alaska family law provides for both fault and no-fault divorce.
In a no-fault divorce, neither spouse is held responsible for the marital breakdown. The only no-fault ground for divorce in Alaska is legally termed as "incompatibility of temperament."
Fault divorce may be granted when the petitioner alleges the respondent's misconduct as the basis for the separation and can prove it before the court.
In Alaska, fault grounds for divorce include:
•failure to consummate the marriage at the time of the marriage and continuing at the commencement of the action;
•adultery;
•felony conviction;
•wilful desertion for one year;
•cruel treatment endangering life or health;
•habitual drunkenness for at least one year after the marriage began;
•drug addiction;
•incurable mental illness (confined to an institution for at least 18 months before filing for divorce).