
Divorce & Family Law Attorney in Hanover County, Virginia
Virginia is an equitable distribution state, not community property. Marital property is divided fairly based on 11 statutory factors. Mr. Sris personally amended Va. Code § 20-107.3, the equitable distribution statute.
Virginia Family Law Statutes for Hanover County
Family law in Hanover County is defined by the Virginia Code. Key statutes include Va. Code § 20-91 (divorce grounds), § 20-107.3 (equitable distribution), § 20-108.1 (child support guidelines), § 20-124.2 (custody best interests), and § 20-107.1 (spousal support factors). Virginia requires a 6-month separation for no-fault divorce when there are no minor children and a signed separation agreement, or a 1-year separation when minor children are involved. Fault grounds include adultery, cruelty, desertion for one year, and felony conviction with imprisonment for one year or more.
Last verified: March 2026 | Hanover County General District Court | Virginia General Assembly
Official Legal Resources
For the complete text of Virginia family law statutes, visit the Virginia Code Title 20, Chapter 6 (Domestic Relations). For court information, forms, and procedures, see the Hanover County General District Court website.
Hanover County Family Law Procedures
Hanover County Circuit Court handles all divorce, equitable distribution, and spousal support matters. The Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court handles standalone custody, visitation, child support, and protective orders. Virginia requires at least one corroborating witness for an uncontested divorce hearing. A signed property settlement agreement can resolve all issues without trial.
- File the initial complaint: File a Complaint for Divorce or other family law action at the Hanover County Circuit Court Clerk’s Office, 7507 Library Drive, Suite 201, Hanover, VA 23069. Pay the $86 filing fee.
- Serve the other party: Have the complaint and summons served on your spouse by a sheriff ($12) or private process server ($50-$100). File proof of service with the court.
- Attend the pendente lite hearing: If temporary support or custody is needed, file a motion for pendente lite relief. The court typically schedules a hearing within 21-60 days.
- Complete discovery: Exchange financial documents and other evidence through interrogatories, requests for production, and depositions. This is required for equitable distribution.
- Attempt settlement or mediation: Attend mediation ($100-$300/hour per party) to try to reach a settlement on property division, support, and custody without a trial.
- Proceed to trial if necessary: If settlement fails, the case proceeds to trial before a Hanover County Circuit Court judge. Present evidence and arguments on all contested issues.
Penalties and Legal Standards
In Hanover County, family law matters involve equitable distribution of property, child support based on Virginia guidelines, and custody determined by the child’s best interests.
| Offense/Matter | Classification/Legal Standard | Potential Outcome | Financial Impact | Additional Consequences |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Divorce (No-Fault) | 6-month or 1-year separation required | Dissolution of marriage | Court costs: $86+; Attorney fees vary | Property division, support orders |
| Equitable Distribution | Va. Code § 20-107.3 (11 factors) | Fair division of marital property | Valuation costs; Possible unequal split | Business valuation; Retirement account division |
| Child Support | Virginia guidelines based on income | Monthly payment order | Based on combined gross income | Health insurance; Child care costs |
| Child Custody | Best interests of child (10 factors) | Legal & physical custody arrangement | Guardian ad Litem: $500-$2,500+ | Parenting plan; Visitation schedule |
| Spousal Support | 13 statutory factors under Va. Code § 20-107.1 | Temporary or permanent support order | Based on need and ability to pay | Tax implications; Modification possible |
Results may vary. Each case depends on unique facts and circumstances.
Firm Credentials and Experience
Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C. was founded in 1997 by former prosecutor Mr. Sris. The firm has over 120 years of combined legal experience and 4,739+ documented case results firm-wide with a 93%+ favorable outcome rate. Mr. Sris personally amended Virginia’s equitable distribution statute, Va. Code § 20-107.3. Our tagline is “Global advocacy. Local precision.”
Mr. Sris
Owner & CEO, Managing Attorney
Bar Admissions: Virginia, Maryland, District of Columbia, New Jersey, New York
Former prosecutor who founded the firm in 1997. Personally amended Va. Code § 20-107.3, Virginia’s equitable distribution statute. Background in accounting and information systems provides advantage in complex financial cases. Accepts only a limited number of complex family law matters requiring advanced strategy.
Samantha Rae Powers, Associate Attorney at Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C. — Licensed in VA, FL. Experienced family law and civil litigator. View Samantha Rae Powers’s Profile
Case Results in Hanover County
Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C. has 19 documented case results in Hanover County across all practice areas with a 100% favorable outcome rate. These results include divorces with favorable property division, child custody arrangements in the client’s best interests, and support orders that fairly reflect financial circumstances.
Results may vary. Prior results do not aim for a similar outcome.
Local Representation in Hanover County
Our Richmond location serves clients at Hanover County courts (7507 Library Drive). We are accessible via I-95, I-295, Route 1, Route 301, and Route 33. We are a family law lawyer near Hanover County serving Mechanicsville, Ashland, Atlee, Beaverdam, and Doswell.
24/7 phone consultations — (888) 437-7747 — meetings by appointment only.
Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C.
Richmond Location — 7400 Beaufont Springs Dr, Suite 300, Rm 395
Richmond, VA 23225
Phone: (888) 437-7747 | Local: (804)201-9009
By appointment only.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a divorce take in Hanover County, Virginia?
Uncontested divorce with signed separation agreement: 2-4 months from filing to final decree; contested divorce: 9-18 months; complex equitable distribution with business valuation or retirement assets: 12-24 months; pendente lite hearing for temporary support and custody: typically set within 21-60 days of motion. Virginia requires a 6-month separation (no minor children with signed agreement) or 1-year separation (with minor children) before filing no-fault.
How much does a divorce cost in Hanover County, Virginia?
Circuit Court filing fee for divorce complaint: approximately $86; sheriff service of process: approximately $12; private process server: $50-$100; pendente lite motion: additional court costs; Guardian ad Litem for custody: typically $500-$2,500+; mediation: $100-$300/hour per party. Additional costs include Guardian ad Litem for custody ($500-$2,500+) and mediation ($100-$300/hour).
Is Virginia a community property state?
No. Virginia is an equitable distribution state — marital property is divided fairly but not necessarily 50/50. The court considers 11 factors under Va. Code § 20-107.3 (personally amended by Mr. Sris). Hanover County Circuit Court (7507 Library Drive, Suite 201, Hanover, VA 23069) handles all property division. Separate property (pre-marriage, inheritance, gifts) is excluded.
How is child custody decided in Hanover County, Virginia?
Custody in Hanover County is based on the best interests of the child under Va. Code § 20-124.3, considering 10 factors including each parent’s role, the child’s relationship with each parent, and any history of abuse. Hanover County J&DR Court handles standalone custody. Hanover County Circuit Court handles custody within divorce cases.
What are the grounds for divorce in Virginia?
No-fault: 6-month separation (no minor children + signed agreement) or 1-year separation. Fault grounds: adultery (no waiting period), cruelty, desertion (1 year), felony conviction (1+ year imprisonment). Filed at Hanover County Circuit Court. Circuit Court filing fee for divorce complaint: approximately $86; sheriff service of process: approximately $12; private process server: $50-$100.
Related Legal Resources
Virginia Family Law Lawyer | Henrico County Family Law Lawyer | Chesterfield County Family Law Lawyer | Hanover County Criminal Defense Lawyer | Attorney Bryan Block Profile | Richmond Office Location
Last verified: March 2026. Information updated as of March 2026. Laws change — contact Law Offices Of SRIS, P.C. at (888) 437-7747 for current guidance.