Divorce with an adjudication of guilt is carried out when one spouse is at fault for the breakdown of marital relations or both parties are at fault. In practice, the procedure is very complicated, as often the alleged guilty party does not agree with the spouse’s decision. When the conflict between the parties escalates, and an amicable end to the marriage is impossible, conducting a divorce with an adjudication of guilt becomes the only fair option. The undoubted advantages of a divorce with an adjudication of guilt are: the ability to claim alimony from the guilty spouse; unequal division of property or internal satisfaction. The disadvantage is that the court does not necessarily have to order alimony, and guilt does not always affect the unequal division of property, for example, when there has been marital infidelity.