A covenant marriage is a type of marriage that is only available in Arizona, Arkansas, and Louisiana. In a covenant marriage the spouses promise that (1) they will participate in marriage counseling before filing for divorce; (2) agree to a longer waiting period before the divorce can be finalized; and (3) must allege fault grounds for the divorce (cannot seek a divorce on no-fault grounds such as irreconcilable differences).
Laws vary among states that recognize covenant marriages, but in a covenant marriage a spouse seeking a divorce generally must allege fault grounds such as:
• Adultery by the other spouse;
• Commission of a felony by the other spouse and sentence of imprisonment at hard labor or death;
• Abandonment by the other spouse for one year;
• Physical or sexual abuse of the spouse or of a child of either spouse; or
• The spouses have lived separate and apart for two years; or the spouses are judicially or legally separated and have lived separate and apart since the legal separation for (a) one year and six months if there is a minor child or children of the marriage; (b) one year if the separation was granted for abuse of a child of either spouse; or (c) one year in all other cases.
In the state of Washington, covenant marriages are not recognized as they are only available in Arizona, Arkansas, and Louisiana. Therefore, the specific provisions that apply to covenant marriages, such as mandatory marriage counseling before filing for divorce, longer waiting periods before a divorce can be finalized, and the requirement to allege fault grounds for divorce, do not apply in Washington. Washington is a no-fault divorce state, meaning that a spouse can file for divorce without alleging any wrongdoing by the other spouse, and the only ground for divorce is the irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. Couples in Washington seeking to divorce do not need to prove fault such as adultery, abandonment, or abuse, and there is no requirement for a period of separation before a divorce can be granted.