Every Alabama divorce is one of two kinds. In an uncontested divorce, both spouses agree on every term — property, debts, custody, support — before the case is filed, and the court’s role is to review and approve. In a contested divorce, at least one issue is disputed, and the case moves through discovery, negotiation, mediation, and possibly trial until every issue is resolved.
The difference is not paperwork. It is months of time, thousands of dollars, and a fundamentally different experience. Here is how the two paths actually work in Jefferson County, how to tell which one you are on, and what happens when a case switches tracks mid-stream.
Uncontested does not mean amicable, and it does not mean easy. It means complete agreement on every term:
Agreement on “most things” is not uncontested. One unresolved issue — who keeps the house, one retirement account, one holiday in the parenting schedule — makes the case contested until that issue is resolved.
Ala. Code § 30-2-8.1 — The 30-day waiting period applies to every divorce, uncontested included.
Ala. Code § 30-2-1 — No-fault grounds (incompatibility, irretrievable breakdown) are what most uncontested divorces plead.
Rule 32, Ala. R. Jud. Admin. — Child support in an uncontested agreement still has to square with the state guidelines; courts review it.
With full agreement, the sequence is short: one spouse files the complaint in the correct division (Birmingham or Bessemer, based on residency), the other signs an answer and waiver, both sign the settlement agreement and required affidavits, and the case sits out Alabama’s 30-day waiting period before the judge reviews and enters the decree. Most Jefferson County uncontested divorces finish within 30-60 days after the waiting period — often without anyone setting foot in a courtroom.
The catch: an uncontested decree is just as permanent as a litigated one. Property divisions are essentially final and not modifiable later. The couple that drafts their own agreement to save money, and gets the retirement division or deed language wrong, often spends more trying to fix it than careful drafting would have cost. Uncontested is a legal path, not a shortcut past legal advice.
When any issue is disputed, the case enters the full litigation sequence: answer and counterclaims, financial disclosures, discovery (interrogatories, document production, depositions where warranted), negotiation throughout, mediation — which Jefferson County judges generally expect before trial — and trial for the small fraction of cases that do not settle. Typical contested timelines run 6-9 months; complex estates and custody fights run longer. Our Birmingham timeline guide breaks down where the months go.
Contested does not mean scorched-earth. Most contested cases settle — at mediation or before — once both sides have the financial picture and realistic expectations. The label describes the starting posture, not the ending.
Half of knowing your path is knowing what full agreement actually requires — and what your agreement is missing. Our team can review your situation in a consultation and tell you honestly where your case sits and what it will take to finish it.
Schedule a ConsultationThe most common shift. Discovery fills in the financial picture, mediation closes the gaps, and a case that started with disputes ends in a signed agreement. Every contested case should be run with this exit in mind — positioning for settlement is not weakness, it is where most cases end.
The more painful shift. An “agreed” divorce collapses when one spouse discovers the agreement was built on incomplete information — an undisclosed account, an undervalued business, a parenting schedule that was never realistic. The lesson: agree after you know the numbers, not before. A short review with counsel before signing protects an uncontested case far more often than it derails one.
Is an uncontested divorce cheaper?
Substantially. Uncontested divorces are commonly handled on a flat fee and skip discovery, motion practice, and trial preparation entirely. The total cost is typically a small fraction of a contested case.
We agree on almost everything. Are we uncontested?
Not yet. Uncontested requires complete agreement on every term. The good news: resolving the last one or two issues through counsel-led negotiation is far cheaper than litigating everything, and the case can proceed as uncontested once the agreement is complete.
Do we need separate lawyers for an uncontested divorce?
One attorney cannot represent both spouses — that is a conflict of interest. Commonly, one spouse's attorney drafts the agreement and the other spouse either proceeds unrepresented or hires counsel for a review. An independent review before signing is inexpensive insurance on a permanent document.
Can we start uncontested and switch if it falls apart?
Yes. If agreement collapses, the case proceeds as contested from wherever it stands. Nothing about starting cooperatively forfeits your rights — but be careful about signing anything before the full financial picture is known.
Does an uncontested divorce still go before a judge?
A judge reviews and approves the agreement and enters the decree, but in most Jefferson County uncontested cases there is no hearing to attend. The review is real, though: courts check that child support squares with Rule 32 and that the agreement is complete.
Is mediation only for contested cases?
Mediation is standard in contested cases, but couples who are close to agreement sometimes use a single mediation session to close the remaining gaps and convert the case to uncontested. It is often the cheapest bridge between the two paths.
Which is more private?
Uncontested, by a wide margin. Contested litigation generates filings, hearings, and a record. An uncontested case resolves on paper with minimal public footprint — a real consideration for professionals and business owners.
Case examples in this article illustrate patterns, not guaranteed outcomes. Every case depends on its own facts.