Financial Planning by Life Stage UK 2026 — Find Your Situation

Divorce Financial Guide UK 2026: Protecting Your Money

Essential financial guide for divorce in the UK. Learn about asset division, pensions, the family home, and how to protect your financial future.

Divorce is emotionally difficult, but the financial implications can be equally challenging. This guide explains what you need to know about finances during divorce in England and Wales, helping you protect your interests and plan for the future.

Financial Overview of Divorce

What Gets Divided?

In divorce, courts consider all “matrimonial assets”:

Typically IncludedUsually Excluded
Family homeInheritances (sometimes)
Savings and investmentsPre-marital assets (sometimes)
PensionsGifts from family (sometimes)
Business interestsAssets protected by prenup
Cars and valuablesFuture inheritance expectation
Debts (shared jointly)Personal injury compensation

Important: Courts can include “excluded” assets if needed to meet needs, especially in long marriages.

How Courts Decide Division

The court aims for a fair outcome, considering:

  1. Needs - Each person’s financial needs (especially housing, children)
  2. Available resources - Total assets and income
  3. Standard of living - During the marriage
  4. Ages and health - Of both parties
  5. Contributions - Financial and non-financial (homemaker counted equally)
  6. Children’s welfare - Priority consideration
  7. Marriage length - Longer marriages more likely 50/50

Typical Outcomes

ScenarioCommon Result
Short marriage, no children, similar earningsReturn to pre-marriage position
Long marriage, similar contributions50/50 split
Long marriage, one primary earner50/50 split (contribution equal)
Children involvedPrimary carer often gets more house equity
Significant pension disparityPension sharing likely

The Family Home

The family home is often the most significant asset.

Options for the Family Home

OptionHow It WorksBest When
Sell and splitSell, divide proceedsBoth want fresh start
One buys out otherOne keeps home, pays other shareOne can afford mortgage alone
Mesher OrderSale delayed (e.g., until children 18)Children need stability
Transfer to one spouseOther gets offsetting assetsClean break preferred
Continue joint ownershipBoth remain ownersNeither can afford alone (rare)

Calculating Home Equity

ItemExample
Current market value£350,000
Minus: Outstanding mortgage-£180,000
Minus: Selling costs (~3%)-£10,500
Net equity£159,500

Share depends on overall settlement, not automatically 50/50.

Mortgage Considerations

  • Joint mortgage: Both liable until paid off or transferred
  • Removal from mortgage: Requires lender approval and affordability
  • New mortgage: Now assessed on single income
  • Interest rates: May differ from joint mortgage rate

Pensions in Divorce

Pensions are often the second-largest asset after the home - don’t overlook them.

Pension Options

MethodHow It WorksProsCons
Pension SharingPortion transferred to ex-spouse’s nameClean break, fair divisionComplex, costs involved
Pension OffsettingOne keeps pension, other gets equivalent assetsSimplerDifferent asset types, risk
Pension AttachmentPart of pension paid to ex when drawnNo immediate transferOngoing tie, death ends it

How Pension Sharing Works

Example: Husband has £400,000 pension, wife has £50,000

ScenarioPension Sharing Order
50/50 splitWife receives 44% of husband’s pension (£175,000)
Each ends upBoth with ~£225,000 pension

Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV): The value used for pension sharing. Get up-to-date valuations.

State Pension

  • Cannot be shared directly in divorce
  • But: Courts consider it when dividing other assets
  • Check your NI record - may need to fill gaps

When Pension Sharing Is Important

  • Long marriages
  • One spouse stayed home/part-time for children
  • Significant pension disparity
  • Younger age (more time to grow)

Maintenance Payments

Spousal Maintenance

TypeDurationPurpose
Joint livesUntil death/remarriageOngoing support (rare now)
Term maintenanceFixed periodTime to become self-sufficient
Nominal£1/yearKeeps option open
Clean breakNoneNo ongoing ties

Factors affecting amount:

  • Income disparity
  • Earning capacity
  • Age and health
  • Childcare responsibilities
  • Standard of living during marriage

Modern trend: Courts prefer clean breaks where possible

Child Maintenance

Usually arranged through:

MethodBest For
Family agreementAmicable separations
Child Maintenance Service (CMS)Cannot agree
Court orderHigh income (£156k+/year) or boarding school

CMS calculation factors:

  • Paying parent’s gross income
  • Number of children
  • Shared care arrangements

Approximate rates:

  • 1 child: 12% of gross income
  • 2 children: 16% of gross income
  • 3+ children: 19% of gross income

(Reduced for overnight stays and other qualifying children)

Protecting Yourself Financially

Steps to Take Immediately

1. Financial Disclosure

Gather information about all assets:

  • Bank statements (all accounts)
  • Mortgage statements
  • Pension valuations (request CETV)
  • Investment statements
  • Tax returns
  • Business accounts
  • Credit card statements
  • Debts

2. Protect Joint Assets

  • Neither party should empty joint accounts
  • Consider freezing large joint purchases
  • Don’t hide assets (illegal and counterproductive)

3. Separate Where Appropriate

  • Open individual bank account
  • Redirect salary if needed
  • Ensure you can pay essential bills

4. Understand Your Debts

Debt TypeResponsibility
Joint mortgageBoth liable until transferred
Joint loans/creditBoth liable
Individual debtsGenerally stays with individual
Credit card in one nameTechnically individual, but may be shared

Form E: Financial Disclosure

Both parties must complete Form E - comprehensive financial disclosure:

SectionIncludes
IncomeSalary, benefits, other income
AssetsProperty, savings, investments, pensions
LiabilitiesMortgages, loans, credit cards
OutgoingsMonthly living expenses
CapitalDetailed asset breakdown
Income needsBudget for proposed living costs

Be honest and thorough - hiding assets can result in settlement being overturned.

Divorce Costs

ServiceTypical Cost
Solicitor (hours)£150-500/hour
Simple divorce (uncontested)£1,500-3,000
Contested divorce£5,000-30,000+
Court fees£593 (application)
Financial order£53 (consent) to £275
Mediation£80-150/hour per person
ApproachSavings
Mediation instead of court50-80%
Collaborative divorce30-50%
Fixed-fee servicesPredictable costs
DIY where possibleSignificant (but risks)
Agree earlyFewer billable hours

Tax Implications

EventTax Treatment
Transfer of assets between spousesNo CGT if within tax year of separation
Sale of family homeUsually PPR relief (no CGT)
Pension sharingTax-free transfer
Maintenance paymentsNot taxable/deductible (post-1988)
Selling assets after separationNormal CGT rules apply

Critical: Transfer assets in the tax year of separation to avoid CGT

Rebuilding Finances After Divorce

Immediate Post-Divorce Checklist

  • Open individual bank accounts
  • Update will and beneficiaries
  • Change life insurance beneficiaries
  • Update pensions nomination
  • Review all direct debits
  • Check electoral roll (credit score)
  • Update address on all accounts
  • Get new credit in your name
  • Review insurance policies

Budgeting for Single Life

CategoryTwo-Income HouseholdSingle Household
HousingSharedFull cost or downsized
BillsSplitFull cost
FoodEconomies of scaleSingle portions
TransportMay share carOwn arrangements
ChildcareSharedMay need more

Common increases:

  • Housing: 40-80% more of income
  • Childcare: May increase significantly
  • Insurance: Now separate policies

Common decreases:

  • Food: Cooking for fewer
  • Entertainment: Different lifestyle
  • Some bills: Smaller property

Building Credit After Divorce

If all credit was in partner’s name:

  1. Register on electoral roll at new address
  2. Get a credit builder card - use responsibly
  3. Keep old accounts open if possible
  4. Avoid multiple applications at once
  5. Monitor your credit score through free services

Pension Recovery

If your pension suffered during marriage:

ActionBenefit
Maximise workplace pensionEmployer match, tax relief
Consider SIPPMore control, flexibility
Use full ISA allowanceTax-free growth
Review State Pension forecastFill NI gaps if needed
Auto-escalate contributionsIncrease 1% yearly

Getting Help

Professional Help

ProfessionalWhen Needed
Family solicitorLegal advice, court proceedings
Financial adviserFinancial settlement advice
Pension expert (PADA)Complex pension issues
MediatorHelping reach agreement
Counsellor/therapistEmotional support
AccountantBusiness assets, tax planning

Free/Low-Cost Support

ResourceWhat They Offer
Citizens AdviceFree guidance on divorce process
MoneyHelperFinancial guidance for divorce
Family Mediation Voucher Scheme£500 towards mediation
Legal aidIf eligible (limited availability)
Resolution (solicitors)Can find specialist family lawyers
GingerbreadSingle parent support

Divorce Financial FAQ

Is everything split 50/50 in divorce?
Not necessarily. While 50/50 is common for matrimonial assets after a long marriage, the court aims for a fair outcome considering needs, contributions, and circumstances. Short marriages often result in returning to pre-marriage positions. Children’s welfare is prioritised, which may mean the primary carer receives more housing equity.
Can I protect inherited money in divorce?
Inheritance is not automatically protected. If inherited assets are kept separate and not “mingled” with matrimonial assets, they may be excluded. However, if they’ve been used for the family (e.g., deposited in joint account or spent on family home), they become matrimonial property. In long marriages, courts may include inheritance to meet needs regardless.
What happens to the mortgage if we divorce?
Both joint mortgage holders remain liable until the mortgage is paid off or one person is removed. Options: sell and pay off, one spouse takes over (requires lender approval and affordability), or Mesher Order (house sold later). You cannot simply “remove” your ex from the mortgage - the remaining person must qualify alone.
How are pensions divided in divorce?
Pensions can be shared (portion transferred to ex-spouse’s pension), offset (one keeps pension, other gets different assets), or attached (portion paid when drawn). Pension sharing is cleanest but costs money to implement. Get proper pension valuations (CETV) - pensions are often worth more than people realise.
Do I need a solicitor for divorce?
You don’t legally need one for straightforward cases, but you should consider one if: significant assets are involved, you disagree on finances, pensions are complex, there’s a business, or your spouse has a solicitor. At minimum, get a one-off legal consultation to understand your rights.
How long does financial settlement take?
If you can agree: 2-4 months from starting to consent order. If contested and goes to court: 9-18 months is typical. Mediation can speed things up significantly. Delay often benefits the person with more assets (they keep them longer), so don’t rush but don’t delay unnecessarily.

This guide is for information in England and Wales only. Scottish law differs significantly. This is not legal advice - seek professional help for your specific situation.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Get a divorce