Are you American? Is the other person? The following advice would only apply if you are under the jurisdiction of a US state.
The easiest route is if you both agree (neither of you thinks that either of you owe the other anything). One of you goes to the court and fills out the paperwork for dissolution of marriage. You both can't fill out the form at the same time, one person files and then the other person replies to the filing.
So, the important thing for a nomad is taking into account which county court you would file in. Usually, the person filing has to live in the jurisdiction of the court that they filed in. Are you pretty nomadic now? It may be worth it to research how many days you must live there to be considered a resident of that jurisdiction. Or let the other person file the initial dissolution paperwork to you.
If you are low income, you can see if there is a local legal aid association that could help you for free.
Also, if you are low income (even if you don't get help from legal aid) you can petition the court to waive the court filing fee associated with the divorce. You will need to prove your income status.
If you do decide to go through with the divorce, I would absolutely not recommend doing it without the help of a lawyer UNLESS
-1)the two of you have no shared assets to split (no house, vehicles with shared ownership, a business, land, anything!),
-2)you both absolutely agree to the split of your individual personal property(exactly who owns what), and
-3)you have no shared minor children.
And yes, I have personal experiences with getting divorced. Two, actually. One was a freaking nightmare (custody battle, shared property, lawyers, etc) and one was comparatively quite pleasant (no shared marital assets at all). By all means get help from a lawyer if you have anything to lose. Anything at all. Protect yourself.
But yes, it is possible for it to be fairly painless for both of you.
~angie
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