Divorcelaw Authority

Federal vs. State Authority in U.S. Divorce Law

The division of governmental power over marriage and divorce in the United States follows a structural pattern that surprises many: the federal government holds almost no direct authority over divorce proceedings, leaving state legislatures and courts as the primary source of family law. This page examines the constitutional basis for that allocation, the narrow but significant exceptions where federal law intersects with divorce outcomes, and the practical boundaries that courts apply when jurisdictional questions arise. Understanding this division is foundational to interpreting why divorce law in the United States varies so sharply from one state to the next.


Definition and scope

The U.S. Constitution does not mention marriage or divorce. Under the Tenth Amendment, powers not delegated to the federal government are reserved to the states, and the Supreme Court confirmed in Maynard v. Hill, 125 U.S. 190 (1888), that marriage is a civil contract subject to state regulation. That principle has remained the structural baseline for more than a century.

Each of the 50 states maintains its own statutory framework governing the grounds for divorce, residency requirements, property classification rules, and support obligations. The result is 50 parallel systems. California operates under a community property model (California Family Code § 760), while states such as New York apply equitable distribution principles governed by Domestic Relations Law § 236. Arizona, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, and Wisconsin — 8 states in total — follow community property rules; the remaining 42 states use equitable distribution or similar frameworks, as catalogued by the Uniform Law Commission.

Federal authority enters the picture in specific, enumerated ways rather than as a general supervisory role. The Internal Revenue Code, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), the Social Security Act, the Uniformed Services Former Spouses' Protection Act (USFSPA), and the Violence Against Women Act each create discrete federal rules that interact with — but do not displace — state divorce proceedings.


How it works

The operational structure of federal-state authority in divorce law can be understood through four discrete layers:

  1. State substantive law governs whether a divorce is granted, on what grounds, and how marital assets and debts are classified. States set their own no-fault versus fault divorce standards, waiting periods, and filing procedures.

  2. State jurisdictional rules determine which court has authority to hear a case. A spouse must satisfy a state's residency requirement — ranging from 6 weeks in Nevada to 1 year in several other states — before that state's courts acquire subject-matter jurisdiction over the divorce itself.

  3. Federal uniform acts, adopted by states, create coordination mechanisms across state lines. The Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), enacted in 49 states and the District of Columbia (as reported by the Uniform Law Commission), allocates custody jurisdiction to the child's "home state" — the state where the child lived for at least 6 consecutive months before proceedings began. The Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA) performs the same coordination function for child support, and federal law at 28 U.S.C. § 1738B requires states to enforce each other's valid support orders.

  4. Direct federal law governs specific asset classes and benefits regardless of state characterization. A Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) must satisfy ERISA requirements under 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3) before a retirement plan administrator may divide benefits between spouses; no state court order alone is sufficient. Social Security benefits at divorce are governed exclusively by the Social Security Administration under 42 U.S.C. § 402(b), which grants a divorced spouse eligibility after a marriage lasting at least 10 years — a federal threshold that state courts cannot alter.


Common scenarios

Three recurring fact patterns illustrate how the federal-state boundary operates in practice:

Interstate custody disputes. When parents live in different states after separation, the UCCJEA's home-state rule determines which state's court issues the controlling custody order. Once that order is entered, 28 U.S.C. § 1738A — the Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act — requires all other states to give full faith and credit to that order. This interaction of state custody law and federal full-faith-and-credit obligations is a frequent point of dispute in contested divorces involving relocation.

Military divorce. Federal law under the USFSPA (10 U.S.C. § 1408) permits state courts to treat military retired pay as marital property subject to division, but caps the direct payment to a former spouse at 50% of disposable retired pay. The state determines whether and how to divide the benefit; the federal statute sets the ceiling and the payment mechanism. Military divorce law requires practitioners to navigate both frameworks simultaneously.

Same-sex divorce jurisdiction. Following Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644 (2015), states are constitutionally required to license and recognize same-sex marriages. This federal constitutional floor eliminated the jurisdictional anomaly that previously prevented same-sex couples from divorcing in states that did not recognize their marriages, but it did not federalize the substantive divorce process itself.


Decision boundaries

The line between federal and state authority is not always self-executing. Courts apply several distinct principles to resolve ambiguity:

The domestic relations exception bars federal district courts from issuing divorce, alimony, or child custody decrees under Ankenbrandt v. Richards, 504 U.S. 689 (1992). Federal courts will not exercise diversity jurisdiction to grant a divorce or enter a custody order even when the parties are citizens of different states and the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000 — the divorce court system structure reflects this firm allocation.

Full faith and credit under Article IV, § 1 of the Constitution requires states to recognize valid divorce decrees from sister states, provided the rendering state had proper jurisdiction. A divorce decree issued without proper jurisdictional basis is not entitled to full faith and credit, as confirmed in Williams v. North Carolina, 325 U.S. 226 (1945).

Preemption applies where Congress has expressly or impliedly occupied a field. ERISA preempts state-law attempts to assign retirement benefits without a qualifying QDRO, and the Social Security Act's benefit structure preempts any state-court order purporting to award Social Security income directly to a spouse.

State classification versus federal asset rules. A state may characterize a federal civil service pension as marital property under its own equitable distribution statute, but the division mechanism must comply with the Civil Service Retirement System rules administered by the Office of Personnel Management. State characterization and federal administration operate on parallel tracks that must both be satisfied for a division to take effect.


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