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Legal Information: Washington

Restraining Orders

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Updated: 
December 15, 2023

What is the legal definition of stalking in Washington?

For the purposes of getting a stalking protection order, you have to be a victim of stalking, which the law defines as any of the following:

  • any act of stalking as defined by law;
  • any act of cyber harassment as defined by law; or
  • any course of conduct involving repeated or continuing contacts, attempts to contact, monitoring, tracking, surveillance, keeping you under observation, disrupting activities in a harassing manner, or following you when all of the following are true:
    • it would cause a reasonable person to feel intimidated, frightened, under duress, significantly disrupted, or threatened;
    • it serves no lawful purpose; and
    • the stalker knows or reasonably should know his/her conduct threatens, frightens, or intimidates you, even if the stalker did not intend to intimidate, frighten, or threaten you.1

Note: The judge cannot deny your order because you did not report the stalking to the police2 or because you would qualify for another type of order, such as a domestic violence protection order (“DVPO”). However, the law does encourage someone being stalked by an intimate partner or family or household member to file for a DVPO instead.3 Also, the judge cannot require you to show proof of the abuser’s intentions behind his/her actions in order to grant you a stalking protection order.4

1 R.C.W. § 7.105.010(34)
2 R.C.W. § 7.105.225(2)(b)
3 R.C.W. § 7.105.100(5)
4 R.C.W. § 7.105.225(4)

What types of stalking protection orders are there? How long do they last?

There are two types of stalking protection orders in Washington:

Temporary protection order.
A temporary protection order is meant to protect you until the court hearing for a full protection order. Temporary protection orders include “ex parte” temporary protection orders that are issued by the judge without the abuser being notified (which is what “ex parte” means), as well as temporary protection orders that the judge issues before the completion of the hearing to decide about the full protection order.1

When you file for application for a protection order, you may request that the judge issue an ex parte temporary protection order and an order to surrender and prohibit weapons until the full hearing can be held. If you request this, the judge will include your children in the ex parte temporary order unless there is a good reason not to.2 A judge will grant an ex parte temporary order only if s/he believes that you are in danger of serious immediate harm or permanent (irreparable) injury.3

If you request an ex parte order, the judge will either issue the order without holding a hearing or hold a hearing in person, by telephone, by video, or by other electronic means on the day your petition is filed or the next day the court is in session so that you can tell the judge why you need the order.4

Ex parte temporary orders last for a fixed period of up to 14 days.2 If the hearing date is extended and a temporary protection order is re-issued, the new date shall not be more than 14 days later. If the court permits service of the abuser by publication or mail, the order will last for a fixed period up to 30 days.5If the court reschedules the hearing date and a new temporary order is issued for an additional 14 days, any temporary order to surrender and prohibit weapons that the judge gave you will be re-issued as well.6 Your ex parte temporary order should clearly state the expiration date.7

Full protection order.
A full protection order can be issued only after the abuser is notified and there is a court hearing in which you and the abuser both have a chance to tell your sides of the story, present evidence, witnesses, etc., or it can be entered by agreement of the parties without the need for a hearing.8 The hearing will be no more than 14 days from the date you got your temporary order or no more than 30 days if the abuser was notified by publication or mail, unless the judge reschedules it by an additional 14 days and issues you a new temporary order in the interim.5

The hearing can be held in person or remotely.9

Generally, the full protection order can be for a fixed period (specific amount of time) or permanent (forever). Unless you ask for a shorter amount of time, the order will last for at least one year.10 If it only lasts for a fixed period, you can ask to have it renewed.11

Note: If the judge included in the order that the abuser cannot contact his/her minor children, then that part of the protection order can only last up to one year (but you can apply to renew that part of the order at the end of the one-year period).12 To get more information about renewing your order, please see How do I extend my protection order?

For information on other types of orders available in Washington, see What other types of orders may help me?

1 R.C.W. § 7.105.010(35)
2 R.C.W. § 7.105.100(8)
3 R.C.W. § 7.105.305(1)
4 R.C.W. § 7.105.105(12)
5 R.C.W. § 7.105.200(3)
6 R.C.W. § 7.105.400(2)
7 R.C.W. § 7.105.305(2)
8 R.C.W. § 7.105.010(17)
9 R.C.W. § 7.105.205(1)
10 R.C.W. § 7.105.315(1)
11 R.C.W. § 7.105.405(1)
12 R.C.W. § 7.105.315(2)(a)

In which county can I file for a stalking protection order?

The law says that you “should” file your petition in the county where you live. However, the law also says you “may” file in:

  • the county where the act happened that is causing you to file for a protection order;
  • the county where a child to be protected by the order primarily lives;
  • the county where you lived before you relocated, assuming you relocated due to the abuser’s actions; or
  • the court closest to your current home or your prior home if you left that home due to the abuser’s actions.1

1 R.C.W. § 7.105.075

What protections can I get in a stalking protection order?

The judge in a protection order case has broad powers to issues order that are appropriate to your situation, including:

  • ordering the abuser not to do the following against you or anyone else protected by the order: 
    • acts of domestic violence;
    • nonconsensual sexual conduct or nonconsensual sexual penetration;
    • sexual abuse;
    • stalking;
    • acts of abandonment, abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation against a vulnerable adult; and
    • unlawful harassment;
  • ordering the abuser not to contact you, your children, your family members, or members of your household;
  • ordering the abuser to stay away from your home, even if you share it with the abuser, as well as your work, school, or from the school or day care of your child;
  • prohibiting the abuser from coming within a certain distance from a specific location;
  • making a temporary order about the living arrangements of your children, which can suspend visitation under a parenting plan if appropriate;
  • ordering the abuser to participate in a domestic violence perpetrator treatment program or a sex offender treatment program;
  • ordering the abuser to get a mental health or chemical dependency evaluation;
  • ordering the abuser not to attend the same school as you or your child, if the order protects your child;
  • requiring the abuser to pay the court costs and fees for your petition, including reasonable attorneys’ fees;
  • ordering the abuser not to harass you, follow you, keep you under physical or electronic surveillance, cyberharass you, or use telephonic, audiovisual, or other electronic means to monitor the actions, location, or communication of you, your children, or members of your household;
  • ordering the abuser to submit to electronic monitoring unless the abuser is a minor;
  • requiring the abuser to surrender his/her firearms and prohibiting the abuser from having access to any other firearms, if certain conditions are met (Note: You can read about the conditions that must be met for the judge to order the firearm removed on our Selected Washington Statutes page in section (1) of RCW 9.41.800.);
  • making an order regarding possession of your essential personal property, including a pet owned by you, your child, or the abuser;
  • making an order regarding the use of a vehicle;
  • restricting the abuser from engaging in abusive litigation , making harassing or libelous communications to third parties, or making false reports to investigative agencies;
  • prohibiting the transfer of any assets you jointly own with the abuser and ordering other financial relief; or
  • prohibiting the abuser from having or distributing intimate images of you, including requiring the abuser to take down and delete any such images.1

Whether or not a judge orders any or all of the above depends on the facts of your case.

1  R.C.W. § 7.105.310(1)

If the abuser lives in a different state, can I still get an order against him/her?

If you and the abuser live in different states, the judge may not have “personal jurisdiction” (power) over an out-of-state abuser. This means that the court may not be able to grant an order against him/her. However, under Washington law, there are a few ways that a court can have personal jurisdiction over an out-of-state abuser:

  1. After you file your petition, the abuser gets personally served with the court petition while s/he is in Washington;
  2. The abuser gives in (“submits”) to the jurisdiction of the Washington state court by: 
    • agreement (“consent”);
    • “entering a general appearance,” which often means s/he show up in court at the return court date; or
    • filing a responsive document in court without objecting to personal jurisdiction, which has the effect of waiving any objection to personal jurisdiction;
  3. The actions of the abuser, or someone acting as an “agent” of the abuser, that you listed in your petition as your reason for needing the protection order, took place:
    • in Washington; or
    • outside of Washington but the actions are part of an ongoing pattern that has a negative effect on you or a member of your family or household; or
  4. As a result of the actions that are listed in your petition as your reason for needing the protection order, you or a member of your family or household has sought safety or protection in Washington and currently live(s) in Washington; or
  5. Due to any other reason listed in section 4.28.185 of the law or in the Constitutions of Washington or the United States.1

Note: For the court to have jurisdiction due to the reasons listed in #3 or #4, above, the abuser must have communicated with you or a member of the your family, directly or indirectly, or made known a threat to the safety of you or a member your family, while the victim lived in Washington.2 A threat can be “communicated” or “made known” in any of the following ways: in person, through publication, by mail, telephone, through an electronic communication site or medium, by text, or through other social media.3 If a written or oral statement is made by any of these means by a person outside of Washington to a person inside the state, that is considered to have been an act that happens within Washington.4

You can read more about personal jurisdiction in our Court System Basics - Personal Jurisdiction section.

Note: If the judge in your state refuses to issue an order, you can file for an order in the courthouse in the state where the abuser lives. However, remember that you will likely need to file the petition in person and attend various court dates, which could be difficult if the abuser’s state is far away.

1 R.C.W. § 7.105.080(1)
2 R.C.W. § 7.105.080(2)
3 R.C.W. § 7.105.080(3)(a)
4 R.C.W. § 7.105.080(3)(b)