Austin Divorce Lawyer - Family Law Attorney
Austin Divorce Attorney
Lorenzana Law Firm, P.C. Blog
Lorenzana Law Firm, P.C. Blog


Facebook Twitter LinkedIn

Austin Travis & Williamson County Texas Divorce Property Distribution Attorney


Division of Property & Debts in a Divorce

It is common for a divorcing couple to decide about dividing their property and debts themselves (with or without the help of a neutral third party like a mediator), rather than leaving it to the judge. But, if a couple cannot agree, they can submit their property dispute to the court, which will use state law rules to divide the property.

Courts divide property under one of two basic schemes: community property or equitable distribution. Debts are divided according to the same principles.

Community property. In Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin, and Puerto Rico, all property of a married person is classified as either community property (owned equally by both spouses) or the separate property of one spouse. At divorce, community property is generally divided equally between the spouses, while each spouse keeps his or her separate property.

Equitable distribution. In all other states, assets and earnings accumulated during marriage are divided equitably (fairly), but not necessarily equally. In practice, often two-thirds of the assets go to the higher-wage earner and one-third to the other spouse.

Division of property does not necessarily mean a physical division. Rather, the court may award each spouse a percentage of the total value of the property. Each spouse will get personal property, assets, and debts whose worth adds up to his or her percentage. (It is illegal for either spouse to hide assets in order to shield them from property division.)

Austin Divorce Attorney
Contact Lorenzana Law Firm, P.C.
Site Map
Privacy Policy

Divorce Attorney Web Design The information on this Austin Family Law Attorneys / Austin Divorce Lawyer website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this or associated pages, documents, comments, answers, emails, or other communications should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information on this website is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing of this information does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.

Address: North Point Centre Building One, 6836 Austin Center Boulevard, Suite 140, Austin, Texas 78731
Phone: 512-338-0529 Fax: 512-338-6005
Administration