Rule 26.1.Discovery and Disclosure in Divorce and Legal Separation Actions.
Last amended October 15, 2006 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Full Text of Rule 26.1
Amendment History
(Adopted by SCO 1325 effective July 15, 1998 and amended by SCO 1596 effective October 15, 2006)
Plain-English Summary
Rule 26.1 governs the information both parties in a divorce or legal separation case must disclose and when other discovery may begin; beyond its own list, discovery follows Rule 26(a)(4) through (e), Rules 27 through 37, and Rule 90.1. Each party must automatically provide a detailed financial picture: real property with recent appraisals and assessments, signed releases for employment and retirement benefit information, a list of financial accounts with recent statements, outstanding debts with balances and payment terms, personal property worth more than $100, investment account statements, three years of tax returns, recent pay stubs and other income proof, a list of assets or debts the party considers non-marital and why, a description of current medical coverage, and anything else required by local order. Unless the court permits otherwise, these disclosures are due within 45 days after the answer is filed, and a party isn't excused from disclosing just because its own investigation isn't finished.
These required disclosures set only a baseline — they don't limit the scope of discovery a party may otherwise pursue in a divorce or legal separation case, and further discovery may proceed on the timing set out in Rule 26(d)(2).
Frequently Asked Questions
What financial information must divorcing spouses automatically exchange in Alaska?
Real property details, income and benefit releases, retirement and pension releases, financial account listings and statements, debts, personal property over $100 in value, investment statements, three years of tax returns, recent pay stubs, non-marital asset claims, and medical coverage information.
How soon after filing an answer must these disclosures happen?
Within 45 days after the answer is filed, unless the court permits a different schedule.
Does Rule 26.1 limit what else I can discover in my divorce case?
No — these disclosures are a minimum baseline and don’t limit the scope or amount of discovery otherwise available in a divorce or legal separation action.