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Divorce vs Annulment in Ontario: What's the Difference and Which Do You Need?

Divorce ends a valid marriage; annulment declares it never existed. Learn the legal differences in Ontario, who qualifies for annulment, and how to proceed.

Family Law5 min readTSLBy the Treadstone Law team · OntarioUpdated 2026-06
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Key takeaways
  • A divorce is a court order that formally dissolves a legally valid marriage.
  • An annulment is a court declaration that a marriage was void (never legally valid in the first place) or voidable (technically valid but capable of being undone because of a specific…
  • Void Marriages A void marriage is one that was never valid and is treated as having no legal effect from the start.

People sometimes ask about getting a marriage "annulled" rather than divorced — often because of religious reasons, because the marriage was very short, or because they believe something went wrong at the time of the marriage. The distinction between divorce and annulment in Ontario is a legal one, not simply a matter of preference, and it is important to understand what each actually does before assuming one applies to your situation.

The short version: divorce ends a valid marriage; annulment is a court declaration that the marriage was never legally valid to begin with. Qualifying for annulment requires meeting specific legal tests that most people do not meet.

What Is a Divorce?

A divorce is a court order that formally dissolves a legally valid marriage. It is available under Canada's Divorce Act (federal legislation), which applies to legally married spouses throughout Canada. The most common ground for divorce in Ontario is one-year separation — proving that you and your spouse have been living separate and apart, with at least one of you intending the marriage to be over, for at least 12 consecutive months.

After a divorce order is granted and the 31-day appeal period passes, both former spouses are legally free to remarry. They receive a certificate of divorce as proof.

What Is an Annulment?

An annulment is a court declaration that a marriage was void (never legally valid in the first place) or voidable (technically valid but capable of being undone because of a specific defect). After an annulment, the law treats the marriage as though it never existed.

Annulment in Canada is a matter of provincial jurisdiction and is governed by Ontario's courts applying common law principles (not a specific federal statute the way divorce is). This makes it distinct from a divorce.

Two Types of Marriages That Can Be Annulled

Void Marriages

A void marriage is one that was never valid and is treated as having no legal effect from the start. No court order is technically needed to establish that it is void, though a court declaration provides certainty. Void marriages in Ontario typically arise when:

Voidable Marriages

A voidable marriage was technically valid but can be declared a nullity by a court if the right grounds exist. Voidable marriages are less common and the grounds are specific. Courts have recognized grounds such as:

Common Misconceptions About Annulment

"Our marriage was short, so we can get an annulment"

The length of the marriage is not a ground for annulment. A marriage of one week that was validly entered into can only be ended by divorce, not annulment. The only exception is if one of the legal grounds above also happens to apply.

"We never lived together, so it's not a real marriage"

Not living together after the ceremony does not void a marriage. You may have a ground for annulment if the marriage was never consummated and one party requests it — but this is different from simply not sharing a home.

"Annulment is faster than divorce"

This is rarely true. An annulment requires going to court to prove specific legal grounds, and the process can be complex. An uncontested divorce, by contrast, is often processed on paper without a hearing once the one-year separation is complete.

Religious Annulments

Some faith traditions — most notably the Roman Catholic Church — have their own internal annulment processes. A religious annulment is a spiritual matter within the church and has no effect on your legal marital status under Ontario or Canadian law. You will still need either a civil divorce or a civil annulment to be legally free to remarry.

Similarly, a civil divorce has no effect on your status within a religious community that does not recognize civil divorce. These are parallel systems that operate independently.

Practical Implications: Why the Distinction Matters

For most practical purposes, divorce and annulment lead to the same result — you are no longer married. However, there are some differences to be aware of:

Frequently asked questions

Does Ontario have a specific annulment statute?

No. Unlike divorce, which is governed by the federal Divorce Act, annulment in Canada is addressed through court declarations based on common law principles. There is no specific Ontario statute that lists the grounds or process.

Can I apply for annulment if my spouse had a secret child from before the marriage?

Probably not. While serious fraud can be a ground for annulment, courts apply a high threshold — the fraud must go to the fundamental nature of the marriage. Courts have generally been reluctant to annul marriages based on pre-marital non-disclosure unless it goes to the very essence of consent.

What happens to children of a void or annulled marriage?

Children are not affected by the void or annulled status of the parents' marriage. Their legal status, rights, and the obligations of both parents remain intact. Ontario's Children's Law Reform Act and the Divorce Act govern these matters without reference to whether the parents' marriage was valid.

I want an annulment for religious reasons. Does my civil lawyer handle that?

Your civil lawyer handles the legal (Ontario court) process. For a religious annulment within your faith community, you would contact that institution separately. A civil lawyer cannot assist with a religious process.

This article is general information, not legal advice. Reading it does not create a lawyer-client relationship. Ontario laws, tax rates, and government programs change, and how the law applies depends on your specific facts. For advice about your situation, speak with a licensed Ontario lawyer. Treadstone Law is licensed by the Law Society of Ontario — reach us at 1-844-900-1070 or start a file online.

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