The Three Financial Decisions in Divorce That Become Permanent Once You Sign

The Three Financial Decisions in Divorce That Become Permanent Once You Sign

May 07, 20264 min read


The Three Financial Decisions in Divorce That Become Permanent Once You Sign

The Most Expensive Mistakes Do Not Happen in Court

The most financially damaging decisions in a divorce rarely happen in the courtroom. They happen at the kitchen table at midnight when you are exhausted, emotionally depleted, and you just want it to be over. In that moment the pressure to finalize, to stop fighting, to move on becomes so overwhelming that signing feels like relief even when what you are signing will shape your financial life for years to come.

That is the moment this series exists to protect you from.

Welcome to Day 1 of Before You Sign. Over the next several days we are going to walk through the financial decisions that too many women make without fully understanding the consequences and how to approach them differently.

Today the focus is on the three decisions that become permanent once finalized and why understanding them before the pressure peaks is the most important thing you can do for your financial future.

Decision One: The House

Keeping the house feels like a win. It is familiar. It is stability. It is where your children sleep and where your life has been built. But as Brittany Richardson explains after more than ten years as a lender and countless conversations with women after their divorces were final, keeping the house when you cannot qualify for the mortgage alone is not a win. It is a liability.

If the mortgage remains in both names and your ex-spouse stops making payments your credit is affected. If you cannot refinance into your own name you may eventually face a forced sale under worse conditions than if you had addressed it during the divorce. And if the house consumes the majority of your settlement you may walk away asset-rich and cash-poor in a way that creates financial pressure for years.

The question is not whether keeping the house feels right emotionally. The question is whether you can sustain it financially on your own and what it costs you in terms of what you give up to keep it.

Decision Two: Retirement Accounts

Retirement accounts are commonly treated as a negotiating chip in divorce settlements and they are frequently misunderstood in terms of what they are actually worth.

A retirement account is not the same as cash. The dollar amount on the statement is not the dollar amount you receive if you access it outside of retirement. Taxes and penalties that apply to early distributions can reduce the actual value of a retirement account significantly and those reductions are often not fully accounted for when accounts are divided as part of a settlement.

Understanding what a retirement account is actually worth to you in practical terms rather than on paper is essential before you trade other assets to receive one or give one up to receive something else.

Decision Three: Joint Debt

This is the one that lands hardest and it is worth slowing down on. A divorce decree assigns responsibility for joint debt between the two parties. That assignment is a legal agreement between you and your former spouse about who is responsible for what.

It does not change the lender's contract.

If your name is on a mortgage, a car loan, or a credit card the lender does not care what your divorce decree says. If the responsible party stops paying the debt the lender will come after everyone whose name is on the account. Your credit will be affected. Your borrowing power will be affected. And you will have very limited recourse because the lender was never a party to your divorce agreement.

The divorce decree and the lender's contract are two completely separate documents with two completely different legal relationships. Understanding that distinction before you finalize your settlement is one of the most important financial protections available to you during this process.

What Comes Next

Tomorrow we are talking about what your lender is going to see during your divorce and the moves that protect your borrowing power while the process is underway.

If you are navigating this right now the most helpful thing you can do is identify where your uncertainty is greatest. The house, your retirement accounts, the joint debt, or your credit. Understanding where the gaps in clarity are is the starting point for building a plan that actually protects your financial future.

Brittany Richardson has been a lender for over ten years and has worked with women navigating exactly these decisions. Reach out to Brittany Richardson to start a conversation about where you stand and what you need to understand before you sign anything.


Sources

ConsumerFinancialProtectionBureau.gov IRS.gov Investopedia.com Forbes.com NationalEndowmentForFinancialEducation.org

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