The better way to get divorced.
File for Divorce Online — Without the High Costs or Conflict
The smarter way to get divorced in all 50 states. Complete your divorce from home with expert guidance, court-approved paperwork, and personalized support.
Written By:
Inna Goloborodko
Director of Operations, Divorce.com
Does Cheating Affect the Outcome in Alaska?
When one spouse cheats, the betrayed partner often arrives at divorce with a clear expectation: the affair should matter. It should change what they receive, how assets are split, what a judge thinks of the other spouse.
Alaska law gives a more limited answer. As a pure no-fault state, Alaska courts approach divorce through a financial and parenting lens — not a moral one. Understanding exactly where adultery matters, and where it doesn't, is essential before you make any strategic decisions.
In Alaska, adultery cannot be alleged as grounds for divorce, and courts are explicitly prohibited from considering it in property or support decisions.
If marital funds were spent on the affair, a dissipation argument in property division is the primary financial remedy available under Alaska law.
This guide explains exactly what adultery means under Alaska law, where it affects your divorce outcome, and what you should do — whether you were betrayed or you were the one who strayed.
Is Adultery Grounds for Divorce in Alaska?
No. Alaska is a pure no-fault state — one that has entirely eliminated fault-based divorce grounds. Adultery cannot be alleged as grounds for divorce in Alaska. Courts are explicitly prohibited by statute from considering marital misconduct in either property division or support determinations.
The only available grounds for divorce in Alaska is incompatibility of temperament. There is no mandatory separation period.
This doesn't mean the affair is entirely irrelevant — it means the legal avenue for addressing it is narrow. If marital funds were spent on the affair, a dissipation argument in property division is the primary remedy. And the emotional reality of infidelity may factor into settlement negotiations even when it has no formal legal weight.
RETAINER FEE
PETITION
COURT FILING FEE
SUMMONS
AFFIDAVIT
MOTIONS
ARGUMENTS
TEMPORARY ORDERS
HEARINGS
SUBPOENAS
DEPOSITIONS
SETTLEMENT
CONFERENCES
JUDGEMENT
TRIAL
APPEALS

What Counts as Adultery Under Alaska Law?
Alaska define adultery in divorce proceedings as voluntary sexual intercourse between a married person and someone other than their spouse. Alaska courts apply a civil standard of proof — preponderance of the evidence, meaning more likely than not — rather than a criminal standard.
Even in no-fault states, this definition matters for dissipation claims — establishing that marital funds were spent on an extramarital relationship requires some evidence that the relationship existed.
What typically does not qualify as adultery under Alaska's legal definition:
Emotional affairs without physical contact
Online or text-based relationships that remained non-physical
Separated-but-not-divorced relationships (courts consider the facts, but technical separation affects the analysis)
If the conduct you're describing doesn't meet the definition of sexual intercourse, it may not qualify as adultery — though it may still be relevant to other fault grounds, or to negotiating leverage in settlement discussions.
Upfront pricing at a fraction of the cost of traditional divorce
Divorce doesn’t have to cost as much as a car.
Does Adultery Affect Property Division in Alaska?
Alaska is an equitable distribution state, meaning courts divide marital assets fairly based on the circumstances of each case. Alaska is a no-fault state. Courts divide marital property equitably without considering marital misconduct. Dissipation of marital assets spent on an affair may be addressed in property division.
Adultery, standing alone, does not shift how marital property is divided in Alaska. Courts focus on financial contributions, the length of the marriage, and other economic factors — not on who was faithful.
The dissipation exception
The primary financial remedy for affair-related spending is dissipation. If your spouse spent marital money on the affair — hotel stays, gifts, travel, an apartment for a paramour, expensive dinners — those amounts may be treated as dissipation and credited back to you in the property division.
Documenting dissipation requires financial records: credit card statements, bank records, and receipts showing that marital funds were diverted. The total amount matters — courts give dissipation claims more attention when the sums are substantial.
Does Adultery Affect Spousal Support in Alaska?
Alaska courts do not consider marital misconduct in spousal support (maintenance) determinations. Alaska courts do not consider marital fault in spousal maintenance determinations. Support is based on need, ability to pay, the length of the marriage, and other financial factors.
This is one of the areas where Alaska's no-fault framework has the clearest practical effect. Whether your spouse had an affair, how long it lasted, and how it affected you emotionally are all irrelevant to the support calculation. Courts focus exclusively on financial need, ability to pay, the length of the marriage, and the standard of living during the marriage.
For many betrayed spouses, this feels unjust. The law's position is that support is meant to address financial need — not to punish moral wrongdoing. If that financial reality matters to your case, discuss it with your attorney in the context of overall settlement strategy rather than expecting the court to address it directly.
Does Adultery Affect Child Custody in Alaska?
Alaska custody decisions are based on the best interest of the child. Adultery does not affect custody unless a parent's conduct or new partner directly harms the children.
Alaska courts determine the allocation of parental rights and responsibilities — custody and parenting time — based entirely on the best interest of the child. This standard focuses on the child's relationship with each parent, each parent's ability to meet the child's needs, the child's adjustment to home and school, and the stability each parent can provide.
A parent's marital infidelity, standing alone, is not a best interest factor in Alaska.
When a parent's affair can become relevant
There are narrow circumstances in which conduct related to an affair may enter the custody analysis:
The new partner's history or conduct. If the parent's new romantic partner has a documented history of domestic violence, substance abuse, criminal conduct, or other factors that create genuine risks for the children, the existence of that relationship may be relevant — not because of the affair, but because of the specific risks the partner presents.
Direct harm to the children during the affair. If a parent's conduct related to the affair directly harmed the children — neglecting their care while pursuing the relationship, exposing them to inappropriate situations, or allowing them to witness harmful behavior — that conduct is relevant to the best interest analysis.
The bottom line
Don't expect Alaska courts to penalize a cheating parent in the custody arena simply because they cheated. The focus remains on the children. If you have genuine, documented concerns about your children's safety or welfare related to a new partner, raise them specifically with your attorney — not as an adultery argument, but as a child welfare argument.
We've helped with
over 1 million divorces
We provide everything you need to get divorced — from conflict resolution to filing support and access to divorce experts — in one comprehensive, convenient online platform.
The team at divorce.com was responsive and helpful during a difficult process. I would highly recommend the site for uncomplicated, amicable divorces!!
Jen B.
I came across this online. So I checked on it. It was easy and affordable. I wish I would have found this years ago.
Brandy D.
I was able to read it easily. Thanks God for this service. I will recommend it to anyone who asks this is a very easy step to do. I love it please try it you won't be disappointed
Dianna R.
Great customer service. Questions were easy to answer and had descriptions to understand the questions.
Andelain R.
Proudly featured in these publications
Filing on Fault Grounds in Alaska: Is It Worth It?
Because Alaska does not recognize fault-based divorce grounds, this question — whether to file on fault — does not arise directly. You cannot allege adultery as grounds for divorce in Alaska.
That said, the affair may still be relevant to your case in several indirect ways:
Settlement negotiations. Even without legal weight, the emotional reality of infidelity influences negotiations. A spouse who knows that their affair has been discovered — and that their partner is represented by counsel — may be more motivated to reach a fair settlement. This is leverage based on practical reality, not formal legal doctrine.
Dissipation claims. If marital funds were spent on the affair, a dissipation argument in property division may produce meaningful financial recovery. This claim is available in Alaska regardless of the no-fault framework and is often the most productive financial avenue.
The most important thing in a Alaska case where adultery was a factor is to channel the emotional response into productive legal strategy — focusing energy on the financial arguments that actually move the needle under Alaska law.
What If You Were the One Who Had the Affair?
If you are the spouse who had the affair, understanding Alaska's legal framework is equally important.
On property division: Your affair does not directly affect property division in Alaska. Document the legitimacy of your marital expenditures if you're concerned about dissipation claims.
On spousal support: Your adultery does not affect spousal support in Alaska. Support is determined by financial factors alone.
On custody: Your affair is unlikely to affect parenting time or decision-making authority unless your new partner poses documented risks to your children, or unless your conduct during the affair directly harmed your children's welfare.
On negotiating posture: Be realistic that your spouse may use knowledge of the affair as leverage in settlement negotiations. Having an attorney who understands how Alaska courts actually treat adultery — as opposed to how the other side may characterize it — is important for keeping negotiations grounded in legal reality.
Our Services
Paperwork Only
Basic access to divorce paperwork where you handle the rigorous filing process with the court.
POPULAR
We File For You
Our most popular package includes a dedicated case manager, automated court filing, spouse signature collection, and personalized documentation.

Fully Guided
Complete divorce support including mediation sessions, dedicated case management, court filing, and personalized documentation.
Practical Steps If Adultery Is Part of Your Alaska Divorce
If adultery is part of your Alaska divorce
Document what you know lawfully. Preserve any evidence of the affair — text messages, emails, financial records — that you have legitimate access to. Do not access your spouse's password-protected accounts or devices without authorization. Ask your attorney what evidence-gathering methods are permissible under Alaska law.
Gather financial records immediately. Pull credit card statements, bank records, and receipts going back to when the affair began. The dissipation argument — the most reliable financial remedy in Alaska — requires documented proof that marital funds were spent on the affair.
Consult a Alaska family law attorney early. The strategic decisions in a divorce where adultery is present — how to frame dissipation claims, how to manage settlement negotiations — should be made with legal counsel who knows your specific facts and your county's judicial practices.
Manage your expectations. Alaska courts are not morality courts. The financial impact of adultery in Alaska is limited to dissipation claims. Understanding this early helps you focus your energy productively.
Frequently Asked Questions: Adultery and Divorce in Alaska
Q: Does adultery affect divorce in Alaska?
A: Alaska is a pure no-fault state. Adultery cannot be alleged as grounds for divorce and courts are explicitly prohibited from considering it in property or support decisions. The primary financial remedy for affair-related spending is a dissipation claim in property division.
Q: Can I file for divorce because of adultery in Alaska?
A: No. Alaska does not recognize fault-based divorce grounds. You must file on no-fault grounds — incompatibility of temperament. The affair itself does not change the grounds available to you.
Q: Does cheating affect property division in Alaska?
A: No. Alaska courts divide marital property equitably without considering fault. However, if marital funds were spent on the affair — hotels, gifts, travel, expenses for a paramour — those amounts may be addressed as dissipation of marital assets and credited back to the innocent spouse in the property division.
Q: Does adultery affect alimony in Alaska?
A: No. Alaska courts do not consider marital fault in spousal support determinations. Support is based on financial need, ability to pay, and the length of the marriage.
Q: Does adultery affect child custody in Alaska?
A: Generally no. Alaska custody decisions are based on the best interest of the child, not parental fault. A parent's adultery standing alone is not a factor in Alaska custody determinations. It may become relevant if the parent's new partner poses documented risks to the children, or if the parent's conduct during the affair directly harmed the children's welfare.
Q: How do I prove adultery in Alaska?
A: Because adultery is not a fault ground in Alaska, proving it in the traditional legal sense is not typically required. For a dissipation claim — the primary financial remedy — you need documented proof that marital funds were spent on the affair, not necessarily proof of the affair itself. Financial records are the most useful evidence.
Q: What if my spouse spent our money on the affair?
A: If marital funds were spent on the affair — hotels, gifts, travel, an apartment or rent for a paramour, expensive dinners — those expenditures can be raised as dissipation of marital assets in your Alaska divorce. Courts can credit the innocent spouse for those amounts in the property division. Documenting dissipation requires financial records: credit card statements, bank records, and receipts. Consult a Alaska family law attorney about how to quantify and present a dissipation claim effectively.
Q: Should I hire a private investigator to prove the affair?
A: In Alaska, adultery has no formal legal impact on property or support outcomes, so paying for a private investigator to document the affair is unlikely to produce a financial return in your divorce. If your goal is documenting affair-related spending for a dissipation claim, financial records are more useful and less expensive than surveillance.

Aleutians East Borough Divorce Guide: Valdez, Alaska Filing

Denali Borough Divorce Guide: Healy, Alaska Filing

Fairbanks North Star Borough Divorce Guide: Fairbanks, Alaska Filing

Kenai Peninsula Borough Divorce Guide: Homer, Alaska Filing

Ketchikan Gateway Borough Divorce Guide: Ketchikan, Alaska Filing

Kodiak Island Borough Divorce Guide: Kodiak, Alaska Filing

Northwest Arctic Borough Divorce Guide: Kotzebue, Alaska Filing

Petersburg Borough Divorce Guide: Petersburg, Alaska Filing

Aleutians West Census Area Divorce Guide: Unalaska, Alaska Filing

Bethel Census Area Divorce Guide: Aniak, Alaska Filing

Bristol Bay Borough Divorce Guide: Naknek, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Juneau Divorce Guide: Juneau, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Sitka Divorce Guide: Sitka, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Wrangell Divorce Guide: Wrangell, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Yakutat Divorce Guide: Yakutat, Alaska Filing

Dillingham Census Area Divorce Guide: Dillingham, Alaska Filing

Haines Borough Divorce Guide: Haines, Alaska Filing

Kusilvak Census Area Divorce Guide: Emmonak, Alaska Filing

Lake and Peninsula Borough Divorce Guide: Palmer, Alaska Filing

Municipality of Anchorage Divorce Guide: Anchorage, Alaska Filing

Municipality of Skagway Divorce Guide: Skagway, Alaska Filing

Nome Census Area Divorce Guide: Nome, Alaska Filing

North Slope Borough Divorce Guide: Barrow, Alaska Filing

Southeast Fairbanks Census Area Divorce Guide: Delta Junction, Alaska Filing
Other Articles:

Aleutians East Borough Divorce Guide: Valdez, Alaska Filing

Denali Borough Divorce Guide: Healy, Alaska Filing

Fairbanks North Star Borough Divorce Guide: Fairbanks, Alaska Filing

Kenai Peninsula Borough Divorce Guide: Homer, Alaska Filing

Ketchikan Gateway Borough Divorce Guide: Ketchikan, Alaska Filing

Kodiak Island Borough Divorce Guide: Kodiak, Alaska Filing

Northwest Arctic Borough Divorce Guide: Kotzebue, Alaska Filing

Petersburg Borough Divorce Guide: Petersburg, Alaska Filing

Aleutians West Census Area Divorce Guide: Unalaska, Alaska Filing

Bethel Census Area Divorce Guide: Aniak, Alaska Filing

Bristol Bay Borough Divorce Guide: Naknek, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Juneau Divorce Guide: Juneau, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Sitka Divorce Guide: Sitka, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Wrangell Divorce Guide: Wrangell, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Yakutat Divorce Guide: Yakutat, Alaska Filing

Dillingham Census Area Divorce Guide: Dillingham, Alaska Filing

Haines Borough Divorce Guide: Haines, Alaska Filing

Kusilvak Census Area Divorce Guide: Emmonak, Alaska Filing

Lake and Peninsula Borough Divorce Guide: Palmer, Alaska Filing

Municipality of Anchorage Divorce Guide: Anchorage, Alaska Filing

Municipality of Skagway Divorce Guide: Skagway, Alaska Filing

Nome Census Area Divorce Guide: Nome, Alaska Filing

North Slope Borough Divorce Guide: Barrow, Alaska Filing

Southeast Fairbanks Census Area Divorce Guide: Delta Junction, Alaska Filing
Other Articles:
Real Answers. Real Support.
We're here to guide you through every step of divorce — whether you're just starting to explore your options or ready to take the next step. Our blog offers expert insights, practical tips, and real-life stories to help you move forward with clarity and confidence.
The better way to get divorced.
File for Divorce Online — Without the High Costs or Conflict
The smarter way to get divorced in all 50 states. Complete your divorce from home with expert guidance, court-approved paperwork, and personalized support.


Written By:
Liz Pharo
CEO and Founder, Divorce.com
Does Cheating Affect the Outcome in Alaska?
When one spouse cheats, the betrayed partner often arrives at divorce with a clear expectation: the affair should matter. It should change what they receive, how assets are split, what a judge thinks of the other spouse.
Alaska law gives a more limited answer. As a pure no-fault state, Alaska courts approach divorce through a financial and parenting lens — not a moral one. Understanding exactly where adultery matters, and where it doesn't, is essential before you make any strategic decisions.
In Alaska, adultery cannot be alleged as grounds for divorce, and courts are explicitly prohibited from considering it in property or support decisions.
If marital funds were spent on the affair, a dissipation argument in property division is the primary financial remedy available under Alaska law.
This guide explains exactly what adultery means under Alaska law, where it affects your divorce outcome, and what you should do — whether you were betrayed or you were the one who strayed.
Is Adultery Grounds for Divorce in Alaska?
No. Alaska is a pure no-fault state — one that has entirely eliminated fault-based divorce grounds. Adultery cannot be alleged as grounds for divorce in Alaska. Courts are explicitly prohibited by statute from considering marital misconduct in either property division or support determinations.
The only available grounds for divorce in Alaska is incompatibility of temperament. There is no mandatory separation period.
This doesn't mean the affair is entirely irrelevant — it means the legal avenue for addressing it is narrow. If marital funds were spent on the affair, a dissipation argument in property division is the primary remedy. And the emotional reality of infidelity may factor into settlement negotiations even when it has no formal legal weight.
RETAINER FEE
PETITION
COURT FILING FEE
SUMMONS
AFFIDAVIT
MOTIONS
ARGUMENTS
TEMPORARY ORDERS
HEARINGS
SUBPOENAS
DEPOSITIONS
SETTLEMENT
CONFERENCES
JUDGEMENT
TRIAL
APPEALS


RETAINER FEE
PETITION
COURT FILING FEE
SUMMONS
AFFIDAVIT
MOTIONS
ARGUMENTS
TEMPORARY ORDERS
HEARINGS
SUBPOENAS
DEPOSITIONS
SETTLEMENT
CONFERENCES
JUDGEMENT
TRIAL
APPEALS


What Counts as Adultery Under Alaska Law?
Alaska define adultery in divorce proceedings as voluntary sexual intercourse between a married person and someone other than their spouse. Alaska courts apply a civil standard of proof — preponderance of the evidence, meaning more likely than not — rather than a criminal standard.
Even in no-fault states, this definition matters for dissipation claims — establishing that marital funds were spent on an extramarital relationship requires some evidence that the relationship existed.
What typically does not qualify as adultery under Alaska's legal definition:
Emotional affairs without physical contact
Online or text-based relationships that remained non-physical
Separated-but-not-divorced relationships (courts consider the facts, but technical separation affects the analysis)
If the conduct you're describing doesn't meet the definition of sexual intercourse, it may not qualify as adultery — though it may still be relevant to other fault grounds, or to negotiating leverage in settlement discussions.
Upfront pricing at a fraction of the cost of traditional divorce
Divorce doesn’t have to cost as much as a car.
Does Adultery Affect Property Division in Alaska?
Alaska is an equitable distribution state, meaning courts divide marital assets fairly based on the circumstances of each case. Alaska is a no-fault state. Courts divide marital property equitably without considering marital misconduct. Dissipation of marital assets spent on an affair may be addressed in property division.
Adultery, standing alone, does not shift how marital property is divided in Alaska. Courts focus on financial contributions, the length of the marriage, and other economic factors — not on who was faithful.
The dissipation exception
The primary financial remedy for affair-related spending is dissipation. If your spouse spent marital money on the affair — hotel stays, gifts, travel, an apartment for a paramour, expensive dinners — those amounts may be treated as dissipation and credited back to you in the property division.
Documenting dissipation requires financial records: credit card statements, bank records, and receipts showing that marital funds were diverted. The total amount matters — courts give dissipation claims more attention when the sums are substantial.
Does Adultery Affect Spousal Support in Alaska?
Alaska courts do not consider marital misconduct in spousal support (maintenance) determinations. Alaska courts do not consider marital fault in spousal maintenance determinations. Support is based on need, ability to pay, the length of the marriage, and other financial factors.
This is one of the areas where Alaska's no-fault framework has the clearest practical effect. Whether your spouse had an affair, how long it lasted, and how it affected you emotionally are all irrelevant to the support calculation. Courts focus exclusively on financial need, ability to pay, the length of the marriage, and the standard of living during the marriage.
For many betrayed spouses, this feels unjust. The law's position is that support is meant to address financial need — not to punish moral wrongdoing. If that financial reality matters to your case, discuss it with your attorney in the context of overall settlement strategy rather than expecting the court to address it directly.
Does Adultery Affect Child Custody in Alaska?
Alaska custody decisions are based on the best interest of the child. Adultery does not affect custody unless a parent's conduct or new partner directly harms the children.
Alaska courts determine the allocation of parental rights and responsibilities — custody and parenting time — based entirely on the best interest of the child. This standard focuses on the child's relationship with each parent, each parent's ability to meet the child's needs, the child's adjustment to home and school, and the stability each parent can provide.
A parent's marital infidelity, standing alone, is not a best interest factor in Alaska.
When a parent's affair can become relevant
There are narrow circumstances in which conduct related to an affair may enter the custody analysis:
The new partner's history or conduct. If the parent's new romantic partner has a documented history of domestic violence, substance abuse, criminal conduct, or other factors that create genuine risks for the children, the existence of that relationship may be relevant — not because of the affair, but because of the specific risks the partner presents.
Direct harm to the children during the affair. If a parent's conduct related to the affair directly harmed the children — neglecting their care while pursuing the relationship, exposing them to inappropriate situations, or allowing them to witness harmful behavior — that conduct is relevant to the best interest analysis.
The bottom line
Don't expect Alaska courts to penalize a cheating parent in the custody arena simply because they cheated. The focus remains on the children. If you have genuine, documented concerns about your children's safety or welfare related to a new partner, raise them specifically with your attorney — not as an adultery argument, but as a child welfare argument.
We've helped with
over 1 million divorces
We provide everything you need to get divorced — from conflict resolution to filing support and access to divorce experts — in one comprehensive, convenient online platform.
The team at divorce.com was responsive and helpful during a difficult process. I would highly recommend the site for uncomplicated, amicable divorces!!
Jen B.
I came across this online. So I checked on it. It was easy and affordable. I wish I would have found this years ago.
Brandy D.
I was able to read it easily. Thanks God for this service. I will recommend it to anyone who asks this is a very easy step to do. I love it please try it you won't be disappointed
Dianna R.
Great customer service. Questions were easy to answer and had descriptions to understand the questions.
Andelain R.
Proudly featured in these publications
Filing on Fault Grounds in Alaska: Is It Worth It?
Because Alaska does not recognize fault-based divorce grounds, this question — whether to file on fault — does not arise directly. You cannot allege adultery as grounds for divorce in Alaska.
That said, the affair may still be relevant to your case in several indirect ways:
Settlement negotiations. Even without legal weight, the emotional reality of infidelity influences negotiations. A spouse who knows that their affair has been discovered — and that their partner is represented by counsel — may be more motivated to reach a fair settlement. This is leverage based on practical reality, not formal legal doctrine.
Dissipation claims. If marital funds were spent on the affair, a dissipation argument in property division may produce meaningful financial recovery. This claim is available in Alaska regardless of the no-fault framework and is often the most productive financial avenue.
The most important thing in a Alaska case where adultery was a factor is to channel the emotional response into productive legal strategy — focusing energy on the financial arguments that actually move the needle under Alaska law.
What If You Were the One Who Had the Affair?
If you are the spouse who had the affair, understanding Alaska's legal framework is equally important.
On property division: Your affair does not directly affect property division in Alaska. Document the legitimacy of your marital expenditures if you're concerned about dissipation claims.
On spousal support: Your adultery does not affect spousal support in Alaska. Support is determined by financial factors alone.
On custody: Your affair is unlikely to affect parenting time or decision-making authority unless your new partner poses documented risks to your children, or unless your conduct during the affair directly harmed your children's welfare.
On negotiating posture: Be realistic that your spouse may use knowledge of the affair as leverage in settlement negotiations. Having an attorney who understands how Alaska courts actually treat adultery — as opposed to how the other side may characterize it — is important for keeping negotiations grounded in legal reality.
Our Services
Paperwork Only
Basic access to divorce paperwork where you handle the rigorous filing process with the court.
POPULAR
We File For You
Our most popular package includes a dedicated case manager, automated court filing, spouse signature collection, and personalized documentation.

Fully Guided
Complete divorce support including mediation sessions, dedicated case management, court filing, and personalized documentation.
Practical Steps If Adultery Is Part of Your Alaska Divorce
If adultery is part of your Alaska divorce
Document what you know lawfully. Preserve any evidence of the affair — text messages, emails, financial records — that you have legitimate access to. Do not access your spouse's password-protected accounts or devices without authorization. Ask your attorney what evidence-gathering methods are permissible under Alaska law.
Gather financial records immediately. Pull credit card statements, bank records, and receipts going back to when the affair began. The dissipation argument — the most reliable financial remedy in Alaska — requires documented proof that marital funds were spent on the affair.
Consult a Alaska family law attorney early. The strategic decisions in a divorce where adultery is present — how to frame dissipation claims, how to manage settlement negotiations — should be made with legal counsel who knows your specific facts and your county's judicial practices.
Manage your expectations. Alaska courts are not morality courts. The financial impact of adultery in Alaska is limited to dissipation claims. Understanding this early helps you focus your energy productively.
Frequently Asked Questions: Adultery and Divorce in Alaska
Q: Does adultery affect divorce in Alaska?
A: Alaska is a pure no-fault state. Adultery cannot be alleged as grounds for divorce and courts are explicitly prohibited from considering it in property or support decisions. The primary financial remedy for affair-related spending is a dissipation claim in property division.
Q: Can I file for divorce because of adultery in Alaska?
A: No. Alaska does not recognize fault-based divorce grounds. You must file on no-fault grounds — incompatibility of temperament. The affair itself does not change the grounds available to you.
Q: Does cheating affect property division in Alaska?
A: No. Alaska courts divide marital property equitably without considering fault. However, if marital funds were spent on the affair — hotels, gifts, travel, expenses for a paramour — those amounts may be addressed as dissipation of marital assets and credited back to the innocent spouse in the property division.
Q: Does adultery affect alimony in Alaska?
A: No. Alaska courts do not consider marital fault in spousal support determinations. Support is based on financial need, ability to pay, and the length of the marriage.
Q: Does adultery affect child custody in Alaska?
A: Generally no. Alaska custody decisions are based on the best interest of the child, not parental fault. A parent's adultery standing alone is not a factor in Alaska custody determinations. It may become relevant if the parent's new partner poses documented risks to the children, or if the parent's conduct during the affair directly harmed the children's welfare.
Q: How do I prove adultery in Alaska?
A: Because adultery is not a fault ground in Alaska, proving it in the traditional legal sense is not typically required. For a dissipation claim — the primary financial remedy — you need documented proof that marital funds were spent on the affair, not necessarily proof of the affair itself. Financial records are the most useful evidence.
Q: What if my spouse spent our money on the affair?
A: If marital funds were spent on the affair — hotels, gifts, travel, an apartment or rent for a paramour, expensive dinners — those expenditures can be raised as dissipation of marital assets in your Alaska divorce. Courts can credit the innocent spouse for those amounts in the property division. Documenting dissipation requires financial records: credit card statements, bank records, and receipts. Consult a Alaska family law attorney about how to quantify and present a dissipation claim effectively.
Q: Should I hire a private investigator to prove the affair?
A: In Alaska, adultery has no formal legal impact on property or support outcomes, so paying for a private investigator to document the affair is unlikely to produce a financial return in your divorce. If your goal is documenting affair-related spending for a dissipation claim, financial records are more useful and less expensive than surveillance.
Other Articles:

Aleutians East Borough Divorce Guide: Valdez, Alaska Filing

Denali Borough Divorce Guide: Healy, Alaska Filing

Fairbanks North Star Borough Divorce Guide: Fairbanks, Alaska Filing

Kenai Peninsula Borough Divorce Guide: Homer, Alaska Filing

Ketchikan Gateway Borough Divorce Guide: Ketchikan, Alaska Filing

Kodiak Island Borough Divorce Guide: Kodiak, Alaska Filing

Northwest Arctic Borough Divorce Guide: Kotzebue, Alaska Filing

Petersburg Borough Divorce Guide: Petersburg, Alaska Filing

Aleutians West Census Area Divorce Guide: Unalaska, Alaska Filing

Bethel Census Area Divorce Guide: Aniak, Alaska Filing

Bristol Bay Borough Divorce Guide: Naknek, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Juneau Divorce Guide: Juneau, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Sitka Divorce Guide: Sitka, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Wrangell Divorce Guide: Wrangell, Alaska Filing

City and Borough of Yakutat Divorce Guide: Yakutat, Alaska Filing

Dillingham Census Area Divorce Guide: Dillingham, Alaska Filing

Haines Borough Divorce Guide: Haines, Alaska Filing

Kusilvak Census Area Divorce Guide: Emmonak, Alaska Filing

Lake and Peninsula Borough Divorce Guide: Palmer, Alaska Filing

Municipality of Anchorage Divorce Guide: Anchorage, Alaska Filing

Municipality of Skagway Divorce Guide: Skagway, Alaska Filing

Nome Census Area Divorce Guide: Nome, Alaska Filing

North Slope Borough Divorce Guide: Barrow, Alaska Filing

Southeast Fairbanks Census Area Divorce Guide: Delta Junction, Alaska Filing
Real Answers. Real Support.
We're here to guide you through every step of divorce — whether you're just starting to explore your options or ready to take the next step. Our blog offers expert insights, practical tips, and real-life stories to help you move forward with clarity and confidence.







