Is Your Spouse Pushing for a Fast Divorce? 12 Hidden Motives in a Controlling Marriage
Question from a reader: “Why would an abusive spouse want to speed up the divorce?”
For some people a fast divorce can sound like a relief. When you have been living with intimidation, manipulation, financial control, or emotional cruelty, the idea of getting it over with quickly may feel tempting.
But when an abusive or controlling spouse is the one pushing hard to “just sign,” “move on,” or “stop dragging this out,” it is worth slowing down long enough to ask:
Who benefits from the speed?
A rushed divorce does not automatically prove abuse. But in a coercive or controlling marriage, speed can become another form of pressure. Here are twelve common reasons a controlling spouse may want to rush the divorce.
1. They may want you to accept a bad settlement
Pressure is one of the oldest tools of control. A rushed spouse is less likely to gather documents, understand legal rights, value assets, consult a lawyer, or think through long-term consequences.
A fast deal may look peaceful on the surface but leave one person with too little money, too much debt, unstable housing, or unsafe custody terms.
2. They may be hiding money, debt, or financial information
Divorce requires financial disclosure. If someone is hiding assets, running up credit cards, moving money, delaying income (for example a large bonus from work), or concealing a business interest, speed helps them avoid scrutiny.
The less time you have to review accounts, tax returns, retirement benefits, loans, credit cards, and property values, the easier it is for them to keep the real financial picture hidden.
3. They may want to cut off your access to money
Some abusive spouses use divorce to intensify financial control. They may cancel cards, drain accounts, stop paying bills, threaten support, or make you feel desperate enough to settle.
This is one reason “getting it over with” can be dangerous. You may need temporary support, access to marital funds, attorney’s fees, health insurance protections, or court orders before signing anything final.
4. They may want to avoid accountability for abuse
A rushed divorce can keep the focus on paperwork instead of patterns: intimidation, threats, coercive control, stalking, child manipulation, financial abuse, or physical violence.
If the case ends quickly, there may be no meaningful record, no custody evaluation, no protective orders, and no careful look at what has been happening behind closed doors.
5. They may want to control the story
Some abusive spouses are very invested in public image. They may want to present themselves as calm, reasonable, and “ready to move on,” while portraying the victim as emotional, unstable, bitter, or greedy.
Speed helps them get the story out first: “I tried to be fair, but my spouse made it difficult.” That narrative can influence family, friends, church communities, employers, lawyers, and sometimes even professionals.
6. They may want to exhaust you emotionally
Divorce is already overwhelming. Add threats, blame, sleep loss, parenting stress, financial fear, and constant deadlines, and a person may agree to almost anything just to make the pressure stop.
That is not true consent. It is survival.
7. They may want to lock in custody before concerns are investigated
Temporary custody arrangements can become powerful. Once children are following a schedule, courts may be reluctant to disrupt it unless there is a strong reason.
A controlling spouse may push for a fast parenting plan before abuse, neglect, substance use, alienating behavior, or unsafe parenting patterns are documented.
8. They may want to use the children as leverage
A rushed divorce can come with threats like:
- “You’ll never see the kids.”
- “I’ll tell them this is your fault.”
- “Take this deal or I’ll fight you forever.”
- “You’re hurting the children by not agreeing.”
These tactics are not about healthy co-parenting. They are about pressure.
9. They may have a new love interest
This is a major one.
A spouse who is already emotionally or physically involved with someone else may want the divorce finished quickly so they can start a new life without scrutiny, guilt, or financial complications.
A new partner can create urgency. They may want to remarry, move in, introduce the children, protect their image, or avoid having the affair exposed. They may also be trying to keep the spotlight away from marital money, gifts, travel, hotel stays, or spending on the new relationship. These could become part of the divorce settlement discussion.
Sometimes the new relationship also feeds the narrative: “I’ve finally found someone who understands me,” or “My spouse is the problem.” That can make them more aggressive about forcing closure.
Retirement Account Concerns: If your spouse remarries before retirement issues are fully protected by a QDRO, a new spouse may gain certain rights to the retirement funds. You should not assume your divorce judgment alone protects you. Ask your attorney about a QDRO (pronounced “quadro”) before you sign the final divorce decree. You may want to delay signing until a QDRO is done.
10. They may want to preserve their reputation
A quick divorce can help them avoid questions from family, colleagues, religious leaders, or the community.
If they can say, “It was mutual, we handled it quickly, and everyone is fine,” they may avoid deeper examination of their behavior.
11. They may want to keep you from building support
Time allows you to gather a team: a lawyer, therapist, domestic violence advocate, financial adviser, custody expert, pastor, or trusted friends.
An abusive spouse may not want you thinking clearly, comparing notes, documenting incidents, or getting professional guidance. Isolation works best when everything feels urgent.
12. They may want a “now or never” negotiation trap
Watch for artificial deadlines:
- “This offer expires tonight.”
- “My lawyer says this is your last chance.”
- “If you don’t sign, I’ll destroy you in court.”
- “We can be friends if you cooperate.”
These statements are designed to create panic. Healthy agreements do not usually require fear.
The Big Questions
A fast divorce is not always bad. Sometimes speed is helpful, especially when both spouses are transparent, represented, safe, and fully informed.
But when there has been abuse or coercive control, speed can become another weapon.
Before signing anything, ask:
- Do I understand the finances?
- Have I had legal advice?
- Are the children protected?
- Is my spouse pressuring me because this is fair—or because it benefits them?
- Am I agreeing freely, or am I agreeing because I am afraid?
In an abusive divorce, the goal is not to move slowly for the sake of conflict. The goal is to move carefully enough that safety, money, parenting, and legal rights are not sacrificed just to end the pressure.
Checklist: Documents To Show Your Attorney
Documents to gather before signing divorce papers
1. Income documents
Gather recent pay stubs, W-2s, 1099s, K-1s, business income records, commission statements, unemployment records, disability income, Social Security income, and any cash income records.
Do not assume the divorce decree alone protects your share of their retirement plans. Ask a lawyer whether you need a QDRO or interim QDRO before the divorce is final, especially if your spouse may remarry quickly. This needs to be done before you sign the divorce agreement.
Also gather:
- Employment contracts
- Offer letters
- Bonus agreements
- Commission plans
- Sales incentive plans
- Executive compensation agreements
- Severance agreements
- Deferred compensation plans
- Retention bonus agreements
- Signing bonus agreements
- Stock option agreements
- Restricted stock unit, or RSU, documents
- Profit-sharing agreements
- Partnership agreements
- Noncompete or nonsolicitation agreements, if they affect future income
- Emails or HR documents discussing compensation, promotions, bonuses, equity, or upcoming changes in pay
These documents matter because a spouse’s paycheck may not show the whole compensation picture. Bonuses, commissions, equity, deferred compensation, and severance can be a major part of marital income or marital property.
2. Tax returns
Get at least three to five years of federal and state tax returns, including all schedules, attachments, business returns, K-1s, and amended returns.
3. Bank accounts
Save statements for checking, savings, money market accounts, online banks, credit unions, Venmo, PayPal, Cash App, Zelle records, and any accounts used for household bills.
4. Credit cards and debts
Gather credit card statements, personal loans, student loans, car loans, medical debts, business debts, lines of credit, and any debt opened during the marriage.
5. Mortgage and home records
Collect the mortgage statement, deed, refinance records, home equity loan records, property tax bills, homeowners insurance, appraisals, and repair or renovation receipts.
6. Retirement accounts
Retirement accounts: If your spouse remarries before retirement issues are fully protected by a QDRO, a new spouse may gain certain rights, especially around survivor benefits of the retirement funds. That does not mean you automatically lose your fair share of the retirement, but it does mean you should not assume your divorce judgment alone protects you. Ask your attorney about a QDRO (pronounced “quadro”) before you sign the final divorce decree.
Gather 401(k), IRA, pension, military retirement, deferred compensation, stock option, annuity, and investment account statements.
7. Business records
If either spouse owns a business, gather profit and loss statements, balance sheets, tax returns, bank statements, payroll records, ownership documents, loan records, and business credit card statements.
8. Insurance records
Collect health insurance, life insurance, car insurance, homeowners or renters insurance, disability insurance, and long-term care insurance policies.
9. Children’s records
Gather school records, medical records, therapy records, childcare costs, special needs documentation, extracurricular expenses, communication with teachers, and parenting schedules.
10. Evidence of abuse or coercive control
Save threatening texts, emails, voicemails, police reports, protective orders, medical records, photos of injuries or property damage, journals, witness names, and financial control evidence.
11. Affair or new relationship spending
If relevant, gather credit card charges, travel records, hotel receipts, gifts, cash withdrawals, dating app subscriptions, unexplained transfers, or marital money spent on a new partner.
12. Legal documents
Collect prenuptial agreements, postnuptial agreements, prior court orders, immigration documents, wills, trusts, powers of attorney, custody papers, and any documents already filed in court.
You may also benefit from
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- Escape Plan: 50-Item Checklist
- Is This Abuse? 130 Overt and Covert Warning Signs
- But He Never Hit Me: Divorce for Neglect, Emotional, and Financial Abuse
- Help! I’m Married to a Cheater! To Stay or to Go?
- Help! I Am Alone with the Abuser
- Myth: The Person Who Files for Divorce Caused the Divorce
- What Is a Life-Saving Divorce?


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