Maine divorce costs $1,939-$24,108+. Maine requires mandatory mediation for all contested divorces. Estimate filing fees, attorney costs, and mediation.
Divorce in Maine costs between $1,939 and $24,108 or more depending on whether both parties agree on the terms.
Divorce in Maine costs between $1,939 and $24,108 or more depending on whether both parties agree on the terms. The single biggest factor is whether your divorce is contested or uncontested — an uncontested divorce with no children and minimal assets can be finalized for a few thousand dollars, while a contested case with custody disputes and complex property division can run well into five figures.
Maine is an equitable distribution state under ME Rev. Stat. Title 19-A § 953, which means marital property is divided fairly — but not necessarily equally. Maine requires mandatory mediation for all contested divorces involving minor children before the case can proceed to trial, with costs split between parties at $80 each (ME Rev. Stat. Title 19-A § 251). Maine allows both no-fault and fault-based grounds for divorce. There is a mandatory 60-day waiting period after filing. A 6 months residency requirement applies before filing. Additionally, fault grounds include 'cruel and abusive treatment' and 'gross and confirmed habits of intoxication from the use of liquor or drugs' (ME Rev. Stat. Title 19-A § 902).
Attorney fees are typically the largest expense. Family law attorneys nationwide charge a median rate of $344 per hour (Clio Legal Trends Report, 2025), with Maine attorneys averaging $265 per hour. Rates in Portland run $275-400/hour, while attorneys in smaller cities charge $175-275/hour (Maine Judicial Branch, 2025). An uncontested divorce may require 10-15 hours of attorney time, while a contested divorce can require 35-50 hours or more. If you're comparing costs across states, see our Alabama divorce cost calculator or Alaska divorce cost calculator — costs vary significantly by state due to filing fees, attorney rates, and property division laws. For financial planning during this transition, our home affordability calculator can help you understand what you can afford on a single income.
If you're planning a divorce in Maine, here's exactly where your money goes — and where you can control costs.
**Court filing fees: $120-180.** Base filing fee is $120 statewide. Additional $80 per party ($160 total) for mandatory mediation when children are involved. This is a one-time cost paid by the petitioner (the spouse who files). The respondent may pay a separate answer fee. If you cannot afford the filing fee, you can apply for a fee waiver — most Maine courts grant waivers for households below 125% of the federal poverty level.
**Attorney fees: the biggest variable.** At the Maine average of $265 per hour (Clio Legal Trends Report 2025), costs depend heavily on case complexity. In Portland, family law attorneys charge $275-400/hour, while attorneys in smaller cities and rural areas charge $175-275/hour. An uncontested divorce may require 10 hours of attorney time ($2650-$3445), while a contested divorce can require 38+ hours ($6546-$13091+). Most Maine attorneys require an upfront retainer of $2120-$3975. For help understanding how attorney costs affect your post-divorce finances, try our after-tax income calculator.
**Mediation costs: $1696-$5963.** A trained mediator in Maine typically costs $212-$398 per hour, and most divorces settle in 1-3 full-day sessions. Maine requires mediation before scheduling a trial — this is actually a cost advantage, since mediation resolves 60-80% of disputed issues at a fraction of trial cost.
**Child-related costs: $2,500-$5,000+.** Cases involving minor children require a parenting plan covering custody, visitation, and child support. If parents cannot agree, the court may order a custody evaluation ($2,500-$5,000) or appoint an attorney to represent the child's interests. Maine courts use the "best interest of the child" standard when making custody determinations. If you're planning for life after divorce, our home affordability calculator can help you understand what you can afford on a single income.
**1. Contested vs. uncontested — the single biggest factor.** An uncontested divorce in Maine requires roughly 10 hours of attorney time, costing $1723-$3445 in legal fees. A contested divorce requires 38+ hours — $6546-$13091+ — because every disputed issue requires negotiation, discovery, and potentially trial preparation.
**2. Children.** Divorces with minor children cost more because they require a parenting plan, child support calculations using Maine's guidelines, and potentially a custody evaluation. Maine courts use the "best interest of the child" standard, and judges may order psychological evaluations or appoint an attorney for the child.
**3. Marital property complexity.** **Equitable distribution.** Maine divides property equitably — fairly, but not necessarily equally — under ME Rev. Stat. Title 19-A § 953. Judges consider factors like marriage length, each spouse's earning capacity, and contributions to the marriage. A couple with a home and retirement accounts faces a straightforward division. A couple with a business, multiple properties, or stock options may need forensic accountants ($5,000-$15,000) and business valuators ($3,000-$10,000). For insight into how property division affects your future finances, see our capital gains tax calculator — selling divided assets may trigger tax liability.
**4. Location within Maine.** Attorney rates in Portland ($275-400/hour) are significantly higher than rural areas ($175-275/hour). The same divorce can cost thousands more depending on where you file.
**5. Attorney experience level.** A board-certified family law specialist in Maine charges $275-400/hour but may resolve complex issues faster. A newer attorney charges $175-275/hour but may require more hours. Balance cost per hour against total hours needed.
**6. Willingness to negotiate.** Couples who communicate directly or through mediators spend less on attorney time. Every issue resolved outside of court saves 5-10 hours of billable work at Maine's average rate of $265/hour — that's $1325-$2650 per issue.
**7. Fault vs. no-fault grounds.** Maine allows both fault and no-fault divorce. Filing on fault grounds (such as adultery, cruelty, or abandonment) typically increases costs because it requires proving allegations — adding discovery, depositions, and potentially expert witnesses. No-fault filings are faster and cheaper in most cases.
Here are proven strategies to keep your Maine divorce costs down.
**Pursue an uncontested divorce.** If you and your spouse can agree on property division, custody, and support, an uncontested divorce in Maine costs roughly $1843-$3565 total. Compare that to $6666-$13211+ for a contested case. The difference is entirely in attorney hours — 10 hours vs. 38+ hours at $265/hour. If you're comparing costs across states, see our divorce calculators for Massachusetts and New Hampshire.
**Use mediation before litigation.** Maine requires mediation for contested cases — embrace it as a cost-saving opportunity. A full mediation in Maine typically costs $1696-$5963 total, while a trial can cost $15,000-$30,000+ in attorney fees alone. Many Maine mediators also offer sliding-scale rates.
**Consider unbundled legal services.** Many Maine attorneys offer "limited scope representation" where they handle specific tasks (reviewing agreements, appearing at hearings) rather than the full case. This can reduce total legal costs by 40-60% for relatively simple divorces.
**Organize your financial documents early.** Attorney time spent gathering bank statements, tax returns, retirement account statements, and property deeds is billable time you could save by having these ready before your first meeting. Our savings goal calculator can help you plan for post-divorce financial goals.
**Apply for a fee waiver.** If your household income is at or below 125% of the federal poverty level, you may qualify for a waiver of the $120 filing fee in Maine. The application is available from your county clerk's office. Learn more about how we verify our data and the sources we use for these estimates.
Maine requires mediation for contested divorces involving certain issues before the case can proceed to trial. This is actually a cost advantage:
**How it works:** The court assigns or the parties select a mediator. Sessions typically last 2-4 hours and focus on reaching agreement on disputed issues.
**Cost:** Mediation in Maine typically costs $212-$398 per hour, split between both parties. Most cases resolve in 1-3 sessions.
**Success rate:** Mediation resolves 60-80% of disputed divorce issues nationally, saving thousands in attorney fees and months of litigation time.
**What if it fails:** If mediation doesn't resolve all issues, the remaining disputes proceed to trial. But even partial resolution saves money — each issue settled in mediation is one fewer issue your attorney bills for in court.
State-specific note
Maine is an equitable distribution state with a mandatory 60-day waiting period. Under ME Rev. Stat. Title 19-A § 953, marital property is divided fairly — but not necessarily equally. Maine requires mandatory mediation for all contested divorces involving minor children before the case can proceed to trial, with costs split between parties at $80 each (ME Rev. Stat. Title 19-A § 251). Fault grounds include 'cruel and abusive treatment' and 'gross and confirmed habits of intoxication from the use of liquor or drugs' (ME Rev. Stat. Title 19-A § 902). Courts may award the family home to the custodial parent for 'reasonable periods' even if it was primarily the other spouse's premarital asset, prioritizing children's stability (ME Rev. Stat. Title 19-A § 953). Maine allows both no-fault and fault-based grounds for divorce. Filing fees range from $120-180 — base filing fee is $120 statewide. additional $80 per party ($160 total) for mandatory mediation when children are involved. A 6 months residency requirement applies before filing.
This calculator estimates total divorce costs in Maine by combining four cost components: the court filing fee, estimated attorney fees based on case complexity, mediation or court costs, and child-related expenses. Filing fees are sourced from the Maine Judicial Branch and verified against individual county clerk fee schedules. Attorney rates reflect the national family law median of $344 per hour and the Maine average of $265 per hour from the Clio Legal Trends Report 2025 (2025), cross-referenced with Maine Judicial Branch data.
Attorney hours are estimated based on case complexity: 10 hours for uncontested cases where both parties agree on all terms, 40 hours for contested cases requiring negotiation, discovery, or trial preparation, and 25 hours for cases where the outcome is uncertain. The calculator applies range multipliers (0.7x for low, 1.4x for high) to account for variation in attorney rates and case complexity across Maine, particularly the cost difference between Portland metro and rural areas. These multipliers were calibrated against published fee ranges from Maine family law firms.
<iframe
id="pc-maine"
src="https://pennycheck.com/embed/legal/divorce/maine"
width="100%" height="650" frameborder="0"
style="border:none;overflow:hidden"
title="How Much Does Divorce Cost in Maine (2026)">
</iframe>
<script>
window.addEventListener("message",function(e){
if(e.data&&e.data.type==="pennycheck-resize"&&e.data.slug==="maine"){
document.getElementById("pc-maine").style.height=e.data.height+"px";
}
});
</script>Data sources