Cost of Dissolution in Summit County, Ohio
Reviewed by Stephanie Green, Esq. · Managing Partner, Gavvl Law · Last updated May 27, 2026
A dissolution is Ohio's cooperative way to end a marriage, and it is usually the least expensive path. In Summit County, the filing-fee deposit at the Summit County Court of Common Pleas — Domestic Relations Division is ~$400. Below is a real breakdown of court costs, the timeline, and flexible, no-credit-check ways to pay for your Akron-area dissolution.
Typical costs to file a dissolution in Summit County
| Cost | What to expect |
|---|---|
| Court filing fee (deposit) | ~$400 (Dissolution of marriage) |
| Ohio domestic-violence shelter surcharge | $32, added statewide to every filing |
| Service of process | Certified mail, sheriff, or private process server |
| Court-approved parenting class (cases with minor children) | Set by the provider; required before the final decree |
| Attorney fees | Flat fee for many uncontested matters; a scoped retainer for contested cases |
Summit County domestic relations filing fees are paid as a deposit to the Clerk of Courts and are subject to court cost adjustments and statewide surcharges, including the mandatory $32 Ohio domestic violence shelter fee. Service costs are billed separately. Fee waivers (Local Form 124, Motion to Proceed In Forma Pauperis) are available for qualifying filers.
What goes into the cost of a dissolution in Summit County
Two things make up the cost of any dissolution: what you pay the court and what you pay your attorney. The court cost is the filing-fee deposit (~$400 in Summit County), plus the $32 statewide domestic-violence shelter surcharge and the cost of serving the other spouse. Summit County domestic relations filing fees are paid as a deposit to the Clerk of Courts and are subject to court cost adjustments and statewide surcharges, including the mandatory $32 Ohio domestic violence shelter fee. Service costs are billed separately. Fee waivers (Local Form 124, Motion to Proceed In Forma Pauperis) are available for qualifying filers.
Because both spouses sign a complete separation agreement before a dissolution is filed, there is no discovery, no temporary-orders fight, and usually a single joint hearing. That keeps attorney fees predictable, and Gavvl Law quotes many dissolutions as a flat fee.
How long does a dissolution take in Akron?
A dissolution in Summit County typically takes about 30 to 90 days from filing. The court schedules a final hearing once both spouses have signed the separation agreement and the waiting period has passed.
Ways to manage the cost
If you cannot afford the filing-fee deposit, Summit County accepts a poverty affidavit (fee waiver) for qualifying filers. For attorney fees, Gavvl Law offers several ways to pay: pay in full by card, finance through third-party providers like Affirm, Klarna, or PayPal Pay Later, or spread a flat fee over time with a Gavvl Direct in-house payment plan that requires no credit check.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How much does it cost to file a dissolution in Summit County?
- The filing-fee deposit for a dissolution in Summit County is ~$400, paid to the Clerk of Courts, plus a $32 statewide surcharge and service-of-process costs. Attorney fees are separate; Gavvl Law quotes many dissolutions as a flat fee. Fee waivers are available for qualifying filers.
- How long does a dissolution take in Akron?
- A dissolution in Summit County usually takes about 30 to 90 days from filing.
- Can I pay my Akron dissolution attorney fees over time?
- Yes. Gavvl Law offers pay-in-full, third-party financing (Affirm, Klarna, PayPal Pay Later), and a no-credit-check Gavvl Direct in-house payment plan so you can spread a flat fee over time.
Call (844) 694-2885 or email support@gavvl.com.