Not after the divorce is final.
You can not remarry until your divorce is final, signed and sealed. There might also be a waiting period before you can remarry in your state. Be sure to find out before you get hitched again.
There's not a waiting period to remarry in TN, but when you apply for your marriage license you have to show a copy of the divorce decree.
No.
No.
No, the waiting period would apply to a person in the military and/or living out of the state where the divorce decree was granted.
30 days
For any divorce, uncontested or not, in the Houston area, there is a mandatory 60 day waiting period from the time that the divorce is filed to the time that it can be made final. In some cases, this 60 day period can be waived if certain circumstances regarding the waiver of citation are present. After that 60 day waiting period, and the divorce is final, there is an additional 30 day period before either spouse can remarry.
There's not a waiting period to remarry in CO, but when you apply for your marriage license you have to show a copy of the divorce decree.
It varies state to state. Google "waiting periods to remarry after divorce" and many websites will give you a state to state listing of the waiting periods. Most states have no waiting period but some have a 30 day waiting period up to a 6 month waiting period. See related question link.
Six months from filing must have elapsed before a divorce may be granted. Colorado code mandates this length of time to allow for reconciliation to take place if it is possible, and to avoid regrets from an emotionally hasty divorce. No restrictions on remarriage exist once the final decree has been entered.
A divorce is only final after the decree has been signed by the judge and entered into the record. Some states have a waiting period before the parties can remarry.
The six month waiting waiting period is called the nisi period. Reconciliation with one's spouse is not an exception to the rule it a reason for the rule. A divorce decree nisi isn't final until the nisi period has expired. There are legal consequences for certain events that may occur during the nisi period. Its purpose is to give the parties a chance to change their minds before the divorce becomes final or/and for completion of certain arrangements pursuant to the divorce decree.In the case of a reconciliation, the parties can file a motion to dismiss and the judgment will be extinguished. There have been many cases in which this happened. A party cannot remarry during the NISI period and there are important aspects regarding inheritance in the event of death.At the end of the nisi period the judgment automatically becomes final and the marriage is legally dissolved. If one party dies during the nisi period the other inherits as the surviving spouse. The nisi period has its roots in English Common Law.