About Cordell & Cordell — Divorce Little Rock AR
Cordell & Cordell serves divorce Little Rock AR clients from its McKinley Street office in the heart of Arkansas’s capital city. The Little Rock office is anchored by attorney Giana M. Messore, who has earned an exceptional reputation among clients for her professionalism, responsiveness, and genuine commitment to each case she takes on. Clients describe her as calm under pressure, tenacious in negotiations, and capable of converting complex, drawn-out proceedings into favorable settlements through persistence and preparation.
Divorce Little Rock AR clients working with Giana Messore benefit from an attorney who listens carefully before acting, responds quickly to questions and emails, and coordinates with her team to ensure no detail is missed. The firm handles contested divorce, custody disputes, property division, and child support matters throughout Pulaski County. Clients across a range of financial circumstances — including those who appreciated the firm’s payment options — describe the experience as professional, affordable given the outcomes achieved, and well worth the engagement.
What Clients Say
Multiple clients describe Giana Messore as the best decision they made during one of the hardest periods of their lives. Reviewers highlight her ability to listen attentively, advocate confidently in court, and defuse tense negotiations with calm professionalism. One client described her sitting beside them throughout a trial while opposing counsel grouped separately — a detail that crystallized her client-first orientation. Clients who used the firm’s payment options describe it as accessible and appreciative of their financial realities. Most reviewers say they would recommend her without hesitation.
Divorce Little Rock AR — Practice Areas & Services
- Contested Divorce: Property division, spousal support, and debt allocation in Pulaski County circuit court.
- Child Custody: Custody arrangements, parenting time schedules, and Guardian ad Litem coordination.
- Child Support: Calculation, establishment, and modification of child support consistent with Arkansas guidelines.
- Paternity & Post-Decree Matters: Paternity establishment, custody modifications, and enforcement of court orders.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a divorce take in Arkansas?
Arkansas requires a 18-day waiting period from service of process before a divorce can be finalized. Uncontested divorces with agreed-upon property and custody terms can be completed relatively quickly after that period. Contested divorces involving disputed assets, custody battles, or spousal support claims can take anywhere from several months to more than a year depending on the complexity of the case and the court’s docket in Pulaski County.
Does Arkansas recognize fault-based divorce?
Yes. Arkansas allows both no-fault and fault-based divorce. No-fault divorce requires demonstrating that the parties have lived separate and apart for 18 continuous months. Fault grounds include impotence, felony conviction, habitual drunkenness, cruel treatment, and others. In most modern cases, parties pursue no-fault divorce for efficiency, but fault grounds can occasionally be relevant to property division or spousal support arguments in contested proceedings.
Quick Facts: Divorce in Little Rock, Arkansas
- Arkansas divorce rate: Arkansas has one of the higher divorce rates in the South, at approximately 3.6 per 1,000 residents — well above the national average — Divorce.com
- Arkansas separation requirement: Arkansas requires 18 months of continuous separation for a no-fault divorce, one of the longer waiting periods among U.S. states — Arkansas Code Annotated
- Pulaski County courts: The Pulaski County Circuit Court’s Family Division handles the majority of divorce and custody proceedings in the Little Rock metro area — Arkansas Judiciary
Related Guide: Divorce Lawyers in Arkansas
