When China introduced its divorce cooldown period (离婚冷静期 lí hūn lěng jìng qī) in 2021, the goal was clear: curb “impulsive” divorces and strengthen family stability. But three years later, the policy’s ripple effects on marital intimacy, gender equality, and societal trust are sparking heated debates. For some couples, the 30-day waiting period offers a chance to reconcile.

For others, it’s a suffocating delay that deepens resentment—or even endangers lives. This article dives into the human stories behind the law, exploring how a well-intentioned policy is reshaping relationships in unexpected ways.
The Cooldown Period: A Legal Band-Aid for Broken Marriages?
The 2021 Civil Code amendment requires couples filing for mutual divorce at civil affairs bureaus to wait 30 days before finalizing their split. Either partner can withdraw the application during this window, effectively halting the process. The law exempts unilateral divorces (e.g., those involving domestic violence) from the cooldown, but reality often blurs these lines.
Take Kan Xiaofang, a 38-year-old mother from Hebei province. After years of physical and emotional abuse by her husband, she filed for divorce in 2022, submitting police reports and hospital records as evidence. Yet, her case was routed through civil affairs instead of court, forcing her into the 30-day cooldown. Her husband used the delay to threaten her, demanding she drop the case. “The law says it protects victims,” Kan says, “but it felt like I was trapped in a nightmare with no exit.”
Legal experts acknowledge the gap. Li Wei, a Beijing-based family lawyer, explains: “Courts handle domestic violence cases, but many victims lack proof or can’t afford legal fees. They’re stuck in a system that assumes consent but ignores power imbalances.”
When “Cooling Off” Turns into Freezing Out Intimacy
For couples already teetering on the edge, the cooldown period can be a catalyst for collapse. Qi Jia, a 42-year-old from Changzhou, describes her 13-year marriage as a “living separation.” Her husband, addicted to gaming, stopped contributing to household expenses or their child’s education. When Qi finally filed for divorce, the 30-day wait felt like “adding insult to injury.”
“We hadn’t shared a bed in years,” she says. “The cooldown didn’t make us reconsider—it just made me resent him more.”
Sociological studies back her experience. A 2023 survey by the China Family Development Research Center found that 68% of couples who withdrew divorce applications during the cooldown reported no improvement in marital satisfaction. Instead, the delay often amplified existing issues like financial stress, infidelity, or emotional neglect.
The cooldown period also reshapes power dynamics. In consensual divorces, one partner may use the 30 days to negotiate better terms—demanding a larger share of assets or custody rights. For women, who initiate divorces at twice the rate of men, this can feel like coercion. Ma Danyang, a Shanghai-based mediator, notes: “Clients tell me, ‘What if he changes his mind?’ The anxiety eats away at whatever trust is left.”
Gendered Risks: Why Women Pay the Highest Price
The cooldown period’s impact is deeply gendered. While the law exempts domestic violence cases, accessing court divorces remains an uphill battle for victims. Many lack evidence (e.g., medical records) or face societal pressure to “save” their marriages.
Human Rights Watch reports that 43% of women seeking divorces in China cite domestic violence, yet only 15% secure court rulings within a year. The cooldown period exacerbates this by funneling cases into civil affairs, where abuse victims have fewer protections.
“Divorce is a major decision,” says He Xin, a sociology professor at Hong Kong University, “but we must ensure vulnerable groups aren’t harmed.” Yet, stories like Kan Xiaofang’s reveal a system that often fails to do so.
Societal Trust in Marriage: Eroding One Cooldown at a Time
The policy’s introduction coincides with a broader crisis of confidence in marriage. China’s marriage rate has plummeted from 9.9‰ in 2013 to 5.4‰ in 2023, while divorces fell from 3.4‰ to 1.84‰ post-cooldown. While policymakers attribute the drop to reduced “impulsive” splits, critics argue it reflects a deeper societal shift.
Younger generations, particularly women, increasingly view marriage as a high-risk institution. The cooldown period reinforces this by framing divorce as a failure rather than a legitimate choice. On Douban (豆瓣), a popular Chinese social platform, users debate the law’s fairness. “The system assumes we’re irrational,” one user wrote, “but it’s the law that’s out of touch.”
The Road Ahead: Reforming the Cooldown Period
To address these flaws, experts propose targeted reforms:
- Exempt abuse victims unequivocally from the cooldown period, regardless of evidence.
- Simplify court procedures for unilateral divorces, reducing costs and delays.
- Mandate free counseling for couples during the waiting period, focusing on communication and conflict resolution.
Until these changes occur, the cooldown period will remain a double-edged sword—protecting some marriages while endangering others.
Key Takeaways:
- The divorce cooldown period (离婚冷静期) aims to reduce impulsive splits but often delays justice for abuse victims.
- Marital intimacy suffers as trust erodes during the 30-day wait, particularly in strained relationships.
- Women face disproportionate risks, highlighting systemic gaps in legal protections.
- Societal confidence in marriage continues to decline, reflecting broader anxieties about autonomy and risk.











