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Family
Updated 2026-04-09

How Are Assets Divided in a Divorce?

England and Wales follow a discretionary system for dividing assets on divorce. The court's starting point is equality, but the final outcome depends on the specific circumstances of the marriage.

Quick Answer

In England and Wales, there is no automatic 50/50 split of assets on divorce. The court aims for a fair outcome based on all the circumstances, including the length of the marriage, the needs of both parties (especially housing), the welfare of any children, and the contributions each party has made. Equality is the starting point for long marriages but the result will vary.

Full Explanation

The division of matrimonial assets on divorce in England and Wales is governed by the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, sections 25 and 25A. Unlike some other jurisdictions, there are no fixed rules — the court exercises a wide discretion to achieve a 'fair' outcome, guided by a checklist of factors.

The section 25 factors that the court must consider include: the income, earning capacity, property, and financial resources of each party (current and future); the financial needs, obligations, and responsibilities of each party; the standard of living enjoyed during the marriage; the age of the parties and the length of the marriage; any physical or mental disability of either party; contributions made to the welfare of the family (including caring for children); the conduct of each party (only in the most exceptional cases); and the value of any benefit (such as a pension) that a party will lose on divorce.

Following the landmark case of White v White [2001], the court's starting point is an equal division of matrimonial assets for long marriages. 'Matrimonial assets' are generally those acquired during the marriage through the joint efforts of both parties. Pre-marital assets, inheritances, and gifts may be treated differently — they may be 'ring-fenced' if needs allow.

Non-financial contributions — such as homemaking and childcaring — are treated as equal in value to financial contributions (White v White). This means a party who did not work throughout a long marriage is not financially penalised for that choice.

The most common outcomes include: a clean break (a one-off settlement that severs all financial ties); periodical payments (maintenance); a lump-sum order; a property adjustment order (transferring the family home to one party, or requiring its sale); and pension sharing orders (dividing pension entitlements).

The vast majority of divorces settle by consent — the parties agree a financial settlement and submit it to the court for approval as a consent order. The court will approve a consent order unless it is clearly unfair.

Legal Basis

  • §Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, sections 24–25A
  • §White v White [2001] 1 AC 596 (equality principle)
  • §Miller v Miller; McFarlane v McFarlane [2006] UKHL 24 (needs, sharing, compensation)

What To Do

1

Obtain Full Financial Disclosure

Before any negotiations, both parties must provide full and frank financial disclosure. Each party completes Form E — a detailed financial statement covering all income, assets, liabilities, and pensions. Hiding assets is a serious matter and can be a contempt of court.

2

Value All Assets

Obtain up-to-date valuations of all significant assets: property (estate agent's report or RICS valuation), pensions (cash equivalent transfer value — CETV), business interests, and investments.

3

Consider Mediation

Mediation is strongly encouraged (and in most cases, you must attend a MIAM — Mediation Information and Assessment Meeting — before applying to court). Mediated agreements can then be made into consent orders.

4

Negotiate a Settlement

Instruct a family law solicitor to negotiate a financial settlement. Consider Collaborative Law or Round Table meetings as alternatives to court. A solicitor can draft a consent order, which must be approved by the court to be enforceable.

5

Apply to Court if Necessary

If agreement cannot be reached, apply to the family court for a financial remedies order. The court process involves a First Appointment, a Financial Dispute Resolution (FDR) hearing (which is a negotiation hearing), and if still unresolved, a final hearing.

Important Warnings

A financial settlement agreed without a court order is not legally binding — always formalise it as a consent order approved by the court.

Failing to disclose assets is treated as perjury and can result in the order being set aside and costs penalties.

Pension assets are often the second-largest asset after property and should not be overlooked — pension sharing orders can divide entitlements between spouses.

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