Vermont's final relief from abuse order provides court-ordered protection from domestic violence. Duration: up to 1 year (renewable).
Published May 6, 2026
## Domestic violence protective orders in Vermont
If you're being abused, threatened, or stalked by a current or former partner — or another household member — you can ask a Vermont court for a protective order that legally prohibits the abuser from contacting you, coming near you, or possessing firearms.
### What Vermont calls it
Final Relief from Abuse Order.
### How long the order lasts
Up to 1 year (renewable).
## The two-stage process
Most states issue protective orders in two steps:
**1. Emergency / temporary / ex parte order.** You petition the court alone (the abuser isn't notified yet). If the judge finds reason to believe abuse occurred, they issue a short-term order that takes effect IMMEDIATELY. Typical duration: 14-21 days.
**2. Final / plenary / extended order.** A formal hearing follows where the abuser can appear and contest. If the court finds abuse by a preponderance of the evidence, it issues the longer-term order described above.
Most petitioners can file without an attorney — court clerks usually have forms and victim advocates help with preparation.
## Who qualifies as a "protected party"
Most states extend domestic-violence orders to:
- Current or former spouses
- Current or former dating/intimate partners
- Co-parents (sharing a child)
- Family members by blood or marriage
- Roommates / household members in some states
Strangers and acquaintances usually require a different legal mechanism — civil harassment orders, anti-stalking orders, or workplace violence orders depending on state.
## What the order can do
Common provisions in a protective order:
- **No contact** — no phone, text, email, social media, third-party messaging
- **Stay away** from home, workplace, school (specific distance like 100-500 feet)
- **Move out** of a shared residence
- **Surrender firearms** (federal law BARS firearm possession by anyone subject to a qualifying domestic-violence protective order under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(8))
- **Temporary custody and parenting time** for any shared children
- **Temporary support** (child or spousal)
- **Pet protection** in many states
- **No new accounts in the petitioner's name**
- **Counseling or batterer's intervention program** for the respondent
## Violation of a protective order
Violating a protective order is a CRIME in every state — usually a misdemeanor on a first offense, often a felony on subsequent violations or with aggravators (weapon, injury, child present).
Victims can also file civil contempt motions for damages and seek modifications.
## What protective orders cannot do
- They don't automatically grant divorce, permanent custody, or property division — those need separate court orders
- They don't physically stop the abuser — police enforce, but a piece of paper is not a shield
- They don't always work for every kind of abuse — financial control, emotional abuse, or coercion may not meet the legal threshold even though they're harmful
Many domestic-violence advocates encourage protective orders as ONE part of a broader safety plan — including a lawyer, a therapist, a safety network, and (when needed) a relocation plan.
## What you should do
If you're in immediate danger, call 911. To file a protective order in Vermont, contact your county courthouse, a local domestic-violence hotline, or a victim-advocacy organization — most provide free help with paperwork and accompany petitioners to court. The National Domestic Violence Hotline (1-800-799-7233) can connect you with local resources. Most Vermont family-law attorneys handle protective-order cases on a flat-fee basis when private representation makes sense.
---
*This guide is general information about Vermont law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Protective-order law has many edge cases (mutual orders, false allegations, modifications, immigration consequences for non-citizen respondents). Talk to a licensed Vermont family-law attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.