Resources
Divorce financial decisions are easier to evaluate when the records are organized, the assumptions are stated clearly, and the long-term effects of proposed settlement terms are understood before decisions are made.
These resources are designed to help clients and attorneys understand common financial issues that arise during divorce, including settlement structure, asset division, support, liquidity, tracing, pensions, equity compensation, and financial record review.
The information here is educational. It is not legal, tax, or investment advice. Each divorce matter depends on the specific facts, records, assumptions, and legal issues involved.
Resource Categories
Settlement Structure & Financial Analysis
Short articles explaining how proposed settlement terms can affect cash flow, taxes, liquidity, support duration, and long-term financial stability.
Separate Property, Tracing & Records
Guidance on organizing records, understanding source-of-funds issues, and evaluating whether separate property claims are supported by available documentation.
Retirement, Pensions & Complex Compensation
Resources for cases involving pensions, retirement accounts, RSUs, stock options, deferred compensation, and other assets that require closer review.
Financial Organization During Divorce
Practical guidance for gathering records, preparing for financial analysis, and understanding what information attorneys and financial professionals may need.
Featured Resources
Divorce Settlements Are Financial Structures
A divorce settlement is not only a division of assets. It is a financial structure that has to function after the divorce is complete. This article explains why taxes, liquidity, support duration, asset type, and timing can change the practical effect of a proposed settlement.
Why Equal Value Does Not Always Mean Equal Outcome
Two settlement proposals can show the same total dollar value and still produce very different results. This article explains how taxes, liquidity, risk, timing, income production, and access to cash affect the real-world outcome of a proposed division.
What Records Are Needed for Divorce Financial Analysis?
Financial analysis depends on records. This article explains the types of documents often needed in divorce matters, including account statements, tax returns, compensation records, pension documents, loan statements, and financial declarations.
Separate Property Tracing: What the Records Need to Show
Separate property claims often depend on whether funds can be traced through account activity, transfers, commingling, and asset conversions. This article explains the basic record issues involved in tracing premarital assets, gifts, inheritances, and post-separation contributions.
Pensions, Survivor Benefits & Divorce Settlement Decisions
Pensions require careful review because value depends on plan rules, retirement timing, survivor benefits, division method, and tax treatment. This article explains why pensions should not be evaluated only by looking at the monthly benefit.
RSUs and Stock Options in Divorce
Equity compensation can be difficult to evaluate because value depends on grant terms, vesting schedules, employment purpose, tax treatment, and timing. This article explains the financial questions that often need to be reviewed before settlement terms are finalized.
When Financial Records Do Not Tell a Clear Story
Incomplete records, unexplained transfers, inconsistent disclosures, or unusual account activity can make settlement discussions more difficult. This article explains how financial record review can help separate meaningful questions from ordinary account activity.
Preparing for a Financial Analysis Consultation
A short guide for clients and attorneys preparing for a divorce financial analysis consultation, including what to gather, what questions to consider, and how to identify the financial issues that need closer review.
