If you and your spouse no longer want to be together, you have two main options: legal separation or divorce. Understanding the difference between these two – and the litigation and/or judgments they may entail – can significantly help you and your spouse navigate tricky legal processes. Separations and divorces can be complex, but the more you know about each, the better your chances of coming to an amicable agreement with your spouse.
A legal separation is when a couple divides assets and lives separately, but they are technically still married in the eyes of the law. Legal separation is not the same as if you and your spouse decide on your own to split assets and live apart. There is a legal process you must undergo to achieve this status. Here’s how to go about a legal separation in Colorado:
In a legal separation, you and your spouse have definitive rights and obligations by law. Couples may opt for legal separation instead of divorce for religious reasons, cultural beliefs, personal reasons, financial decisions, to retain spousal health insurance benefits, or for reasons relating to children. It is possible to rescind a legal separation and return to your previous living arrangement or turn a legal separation into an official divorce.
If you and your spouse opt for a divorce, the courts will effectively terminate your marriage at the end of your court proceedings. Instead of simply living apart and separating your assets, you and your spouse will be legally unmarried. Getting a divorce has one main legal consequence that legal separation does not: the freedom to remarry. If you are legally separated, you technically cannot remarry. A divorce, on the other hand, formally ends your marriage, letting you move forward as a single person.
After a divorce, you do not have to mark you are married on official forms, as you would were you to file for legal separation. You lose the right to inherit from one another, as well as any spousal insurance, social security, and pension benefits. If you and your ex-spouse have another child together, the child would not legally be the child of your spouse unless you formally establish paternity. A divorce allows you to break off all connections with your spouse if desired, versus a legal separation in which you’re technically still connected. These are all factors to take into consideration when deciding between legal separation and divorce.
There is a different process you and your spouse must undergo to obtain a divorce decree compared to a legal separation. When in doubt about your decision or how to proceed, speak to a divorce attorney in Colorado.