Laws current as of October 16, 2024
What are the grounds for divorce in Tennessee?
“Grounds” are legally acceptable reasons for divorce. A judge can grant you a divorce based on:
- irreconcilable differences; or
- if your spouse:
- was impotent and incapable of reproducing at the time of the marriage;
- married you while still married to someone else;
- committed adultery (cheated on you);
- deserted you or was absent for one year without a reasonable explanation;
- was convicted of an “infamous crime;”
- was convicted of a felony and sentenced to a prison/jail;
- attempted to poison or kill you;
- refused to move to Tennessee with you without a reasonable explanation and didn’t live with you for two years while you were living in Tennessee;
- was pregnant with another person’s child at the time of marriage and you didn’t know;
- began to habitually use drugs or alcohol starting after the date of your marriage;
- engages in inappropriate marital conduct, cruel and inhuman treatment, or behavior that makes living together unsafe;
- treats you so horribly that being with him/her is impossible and you have to leave;
- abandons you or tells you to leave without any reason and does not support you financially; or
- has lived separate from you in a different home, has not lived with you as a spouse, and does not have any minor children in common with you.1
1 TN ST § 36-4-101(a)