Texarkana Gazette

‘I want a divorce’ a hot online search during the pandemic

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They’re taking the “co” out of COVID. People are speaking with divorce lawyers and entering divorce-related searches on the internet much more this year than last year.

“It’s really been nonstop these past few weeks,” Vincent Stark, an attorney with Davis Friedman in Chicago, told the Daily News. “A lot of lawyers I know, the last two to three weeks we’ve all become very, very busy. We’re busy with the Zoom hearings and deposition­s, then you’ve got new clients calling, and you’re trying to schedule meetings.”

The coronaviru­s pandemic stressed a lot of relationsh­ips with lockdowns, job losses and salary cuts. Experts have been predicting a divorce rate increase since the pandemic hit the U.S. in March.

Nationwide divorce rate data is not yet available, but divorce-related searches on the internet support the case for an increase. Data analytics company SEMrush found that divorce-related keyword searches are up 11% this year, with nearly twice as many people searching, “file for divorce online” and 14% more people typing, “I want a divorce.”

“It’s probably related to stay-at-home orders and the amount of time people spend at home in this closed environmen­t,” SEMrush’s Chief Strategy and Corporate Developmen­t Officer Eugene Levin told the Daily News. “There’s an idea floating around that people see this year as a time to change things.”

Divorce-related searches increased back in March and have held steady since, according to SEMrush data. Stark and other lawyers, however, have only seen an increase in real life clients in recent weeks.

Stark said that gap may be a result of economic situations stabilizin­g in recent months after the dramatic impacts of coronaviru­s in March. Lawyers, after all, are not cheap, and the search “how much does a divorce lawyer cost” is up 18% this year.

Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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