If you are considering divorce, it’s vital to plan for the dissolution of the financial partnership in your marriage. This means dividing the financial assets and liabilities you have accumulated during the years of marriage. Further, if children are involved, the future support given to the custodial parent must be planned for. The time you take to prepare and plan for eventualities will pay off later on.
Here is what you can do:
1. Make a list of all of your assets, joint or separate, including:
2. Make sure you have copies of the past two or three years’ tax returns. These will come in handy later.
3. Inventory your financial debts and obligations. This helps you to prepare in two ways:
4. Make sure you know the exact amounts of salary and other income earned by both yourself and your spouse.
5. Find any papers relating to insurance-life, health, auto, and homeowner’s, as well as pension and other retirement benefits.
6. List all debts you both owe, separately or jointly. Include auto loans, mortgage, credit card debt, and any other liabilities.
If you are a spouse who has not worked outside the home lately, be sure to open a separate bank account in your own name and apply for a credit card in your own name. This will help you to establish credit after the divorce.
It is important to immediately cancel all joint accounts once you know you are going to obtain a divorce. Creditors have the right to seek payment from either party on a joint credit card or other credit account, no matter which party actually incurred the bill. If you allow your name to remain on joint accounts with your ex-spouse, you are also responsible for the bills.
Your divorce agreement may specify which one of you pays the bills. As far as the creditor is concerned, however, both you and your spouse remain responsible if the joint accounts remain open. The creditor will try to collect the bill from whoever it thinks may be able to pay, and at the same time report the late payments to the credit bureaus under both names. Your credit history could be damaged because of the cosigner’s irresponsibility.
Some credit contracts require that you immediately pay the outstanding balance in full if you close an account. If so, try to get the creditor to have the balance transferred to separate accounts.
If your spouse’s poor credit hurts your credit record, you may be able to separate yourself from your spouse’s information on your credit report. The Equal Credit Opportunity Act requires a creditor to take into account any information showing that the credit history being considered does not reflect your own.
If for instance, you can show that accounts you shared with your spouse were opened by him or her before your marriage and that he or she paid the bills, you may be able to convince the creditor that the harmful information relates to your spouse’s credit record, not yours. In practice, it is difficult to prove that the credit history under consideration doesn’t reflect your own, and you may have to be persistent.
If a woman divorces and changes her name on an account, lenders may review her application or credit file to see whether her qualifications alone meet their credit standards. They may ask her to reapply, but generally the account remains open.
Maintaining credit in your own name avoids this inconvenience. It can also make it easier to preserve your own, separate, credit history. Furthermore, should you need credit in an emergency, it will be available.
Do not use only your husband’s name, for example, Mrs. John Wilson for credit purposes.
Check your credit report if you haven’t done so recently. Make sure the accounts you share are being reported in your name as well as your spouse’s. If not, and you want to use your spouse’s credit history to build your own, write to the creditor and request the account be reported in both names. If there is any inaccurate or incomplete information in your file write to the credit bureau and ask them to correct it. The credit bureau must confirm the data within a reasonable time period, and let you know when they have corrected the mistake.
If you have been sharing your husband’s accounts, building a credit history in your name should be fairly easy. Contact a major credit bureau and request a copy of your file, then contact the issuers of the cards you share with your husband and ask them to report the accounts in your name as well.
The best way to plan for the legal issues that must be faced in a divorce such as child custody, division of property, and alimony or support payments, is to come to an agreement with your spouse. If you can do this, the time and money you will have to expend in coming up with a legal solution — either one worked out between the two attorneys or one worked out by a court — will be drastically reduced.
Here are some general tips for handling the legal aspects of a divorce:
Those who have trouble arriving at an equitable agreement, but do not require the services of an attorney, might consider the use of a divorce mediator. This type of professional advertises in the section of the classifieds titled “Divorce Assistance”, or “Lawyer Alternatives.”
The laws governing the division of property between ex-spouses vary from state to state. You should also be aware that matrimonial judges have a great deal of latitude in applying those laws as well.
Here is a list of items you should be sure to take care of, regardless of whether you are represented by an attorney:
If you have not worked outside the home during the marriage consider having the divorce decree provide for money for you to be trained or educated.
After divorce each individual will file their own tax return. However, there are several areas where transactions between former spouses can result in tax consequences. The most common areas are:
Child Support
Child support is not deductible by the payer and is not taxable to the recipient. A payment is considered to be child support if it is specifically designated as such in a divorce or separation agreement or if it is reduced by the occurrence of a contingency related to the child (such as attaining a certain age).
Alimony
Alimony is a payment made pursuant to a divorce decree other than child support or designated as something in the instrument as other than alimony. Similar treatment is accorded separate maintenance payments made pursuant to a separation agreement. In order to qualify, payments must also cease upon the death of the recipient and must not be front-loaded.
Starting in 2019, alimony as well as separate maintenance payments were repealed by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 and are no longer deductible by the payer spouse.
For tax year 2018 and those years preceding it, alimony is deductible by the payer and is taxable to the recipient.
Property Settlements
Property settlements are not taxable events when pursuant to divorce or separation. Transfers of assets between spouses in this event do not result in taxable income, deductions, gains or losses. The cost basis of the property carries over to the recipient spouse. Be careful in a divorce, your spouse may give you an equal share of property based upon fair market value, but with the lower basis. This can result in a higher taxable gain upon a sale of the asset.
Generally, when these plans are split up there is no taxable event if pursuant to a qualified domestic relations order or other court order in the case of an IRA. This is true, however, only if the assets remain in a retirement account or IRA. Once funds are distributed they will be taxed to the recipient. At the time of division, the payer does not receive a deduction and the recipient does not have taxable income.
Generally, no; however, fees paid specifically for income or estate tax advice pursuant to a divorce may be deductible. Also, fees made to determine the amount of alimony or to collect alimony can be deducted. These deductions would be miscellaneous itemized deductions subject to the two percent limitation.
For tax years 2018 through 2025, miscellaneous itemized deductions (Form 1040, Schedule A) have been eliminated due to tax reform (Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017).
Generally, the custodial parent is entitled to the deduction. However, this is often negotiated in the divorce settlement. If the parents agree in writing, the non-custodial parent can take the deduction.
For tax years 2018 through 2025, the personal exemption as well as dependent exemptions is eliminated due to tax reform (Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017). However, the dependent exemption deduction for noncustodial parents still exists for 2018-2025 (that is, it was not repealed) but is reduced to $0.