Asset Division & Property Division in Georgia Divorce
Georgia is an equitable distribution state, meaning marital property is divided fairly, not necessarily 50/50, based on factors including each spouse’s financial contributions, earning capacity, and conduct during the marriage (O.C.G.A. § 19-5-13). In practice, North Atlanta divorces frequently involve complex assets: business interests, stock options, executive compensation, real estate portfolios, retirement accounts, and investment holdings that require forensic valuation before the court can divide them properly. At Tannen Law Group, we work with certified divorce financial planners and forensic accountants to ensure that every asset is identified, accurately valued, and protected during the division process.
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Attorney David Tannen handles high-asset property division including business interests, retirement accounts, and real estate across North Atlanta.
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Property Division in Georgia. Quick Facts
- Legal standard: Equitable distribution (O.C.G.A. § 19-3-9). Fair, not necessarily 50/50.
- Marital property: Assets and debts acquired during the marriage, regardless of whose name they are in.
- Separate property: Pre-marital assets, inheritance, and gifts to one spouse are generally excluded from division.
- Commingling: Mixing separate and marital funds can convert separate property to marital property.
- Debt division: Courts divide marital debt as well as assets. Both spouses may be liable to creditors regardless of the divorce decree.
- Business interests: Marital portion of a business is subject to division and requires professional valuation.
- Timeline: Contested property division cases in Fulton County typically resolve in 6 to 12 months.
Marital Property vs. Separate Property
- Division standard: Equitable distribution: fair, not necessarily equal (O.C.G.A. § 19-5-13)
- Marital property: Assets and debts acquired during the marriage, regardless of whose name is on the title
- Separate property: Assets owned before marriage, inherited property, and gifts to one spouse, generally not divided
- Commingling risk: Separate property that is mixed with marital property can lose its separate character
- Business valuation: Required when either spouse owns a business; courts use fair market value, income approach, or asset-based valuation
- Retirement accounts: Divided via Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO). Only the portion earned during the marriage is subject to division
- Hidden asset risk: Georgia courts can sanction spouses who hide or undervalue assets, including awarding a larger share to the wronged spouse
- Deadline: Property division must be addressed in the divorce decree; it cannot be revisited afterward unless fraud is discovered
How Georgia Courts Divide Property
The distinction between marital and separate property determines what the court can divide. Georgia law defines marital property as all assets and debts acquired by either spouse during the marriage, regardless of title. This includes income earned during the marriage, real estate purchased with marital funds, vehicles, bank accounts, retirement contributions made during the marriage, and debt incurred during the marriage.
Separate property generally includes assets owned before the marriage, property received as a gift or inheritance by one spouse, and assets excluded by a valid prenuptial or postnuptial agreement. However, separate property can become marital through commingling, when separate funds are mixed with marital funds in a shared account, using marital income to improve a pre-marital property, or adding a spouse’s name to a pre-marital asset.
The commingling question generates significant litigation in North Atlanta divorces. A spouse who owned a home before marriage but used marital income to pay the mortgage, made improvements with joint funds, or refinanced with both spouses on the note may find that the home’s appreciation during the marriage is now marital property, even though the original purchase was separate. Tracing the origin and character of assets is often the most critical and contested aspect of property division.
Complex Asset Types in North Atlanta Divorces
Georgia judges consider a range of factors when dividing marital property, though the statute does not provide a specific list of factors like some states. Courts generally examine each spouse’s financial and non-financial contributions to the marriage (including homemaking and child-rearing), each spouse’s economic circumstances and earning capacity, the duration of the marriage, each spouse’s separate property and resources, any waste or dissipation of marital assets, and the conduct of each party during the marriage.
The court’s goal is an equitable outcome, not mathematical equality. In a 20-year marriage where one spouse sacrificed career advancement to raise children while the other built a professional practice, the court may award the stay-at-home spouse a larger share of liquid assets to compensate for reduced earning capacity. Conversely, a short marriage between two working professionals with similar incomes may result in a near-equal split.
Negotiated settlements give spouses more control over the outcome than leaving the decision to a judge. Many property division disputes are resolved through mediation or attorney negotiation. When settlement fails, the court makes the final determination after a trial.
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Georgia equitable distribution does not mean 50/50. We will assess your marital estate and explain how a judge would likely divide it.
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Hidden Assets and Dissipation
Business interests present some of the most challenging valuation questions. Whether the business is a medical practice in Alpharetta, a technology startup in Johns Creek, or a franchise operation in Gwinnett County, the court needs a reliable valuation before dividing the marital estate. Valuation methods include the income approach (projecting future earnings), the market approach (comparing to similar business sales), and the asset approach (calculating net asset value). The choice of method can dramatically change the outcome. Attorney David Tannen has protected business owners by documenting separate property origins, tracing pre-marital capital contributions, and challenging inflated valuations presented by the opposing party.
Stock options and executive compensation require careful analysis of vesting schedules, exercise dates, and the distinction between options earned during the marriage versus those earned before or after. Unvested options earned during the marriage are generally marital property, but calculating their value requires projections about future vesting and stock price. Restricted stock units (RSUs) and deferred compensation packages add further complexity.
Retirement accounts (401(k)s, pensions, IRAs, and military retirement), are divided using a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO). The QDRO directs the plan administrator to transfer a specified portion of the retirement benefit to the non-employee spouse. Only the portion earned during the marriage is subject to division. QDRO errors can cost thousands in taxes and penalties. We draft QDROs with precision and coordinate with plan administrators to avoid common mistakes including using incorrect valuation dates, miscalculating the marital portion, triggering early withdrawal penalties, and failing to account for vested versus unvested balances.
Real estate division in North Atlanta frequently involves high-value properties. Options include selling the property and dividing proceeds, one spouse buying out the other’s interest, or offsetting the property value against other assets. In contested cases, independent appraisals establish fair market value. When spouses dispute value, each may retain their own appraiser and the court determines the most credible figure.
When one spouse suspects the other is hiding assets, undervaluing property, or wasting marital funds before or during divorce, Georgia law provides remedies. Through the discovery process, attorneys can demand financial records, subpoena bank statements, depose the other spouse under oath, and retain forensic accountants to trace funds.
Common asset-hiding tactics include transferring money to family members or friends, creating phantom debts, underreporting business income, overstating business expenses, moving assets to offshore accounts, and purchasing assets that are difficult to value or easy to conceal. Georgia courts take asset concealment seriously. A judge who finds that a spouse deliberately hid or dissipated marital assets can award a larger share of the known marital estate to the wronged spouse as compensation.
Attorney Kevin Markes has uncovered over $400,000 in unreported revenue and offshore accounts in a single Forsyth County high-asset divorce case. Forensic accounting is not optional in cases where asset concealment is suspected, it is essential.
Frequently Asked Questions
Property division cases often raise important questions.
How are assets divided in a Georgia divorce?
Georgia uses equitable distribution under O.C.G.A. § 19-5-13, meaning assets are divided fairly based on each spouse’s contributions, earning capacity, marriage length, and other factors. The court has broad discretion. Most divorces settle through negotiation; when they don’t, the judge decides.
Is Georgia a 50/50 divorce state?
No. Georgia is an equitable distribution state, not a community property state. Assets are divided fairly, which may or may not result in a 50/50 split. The court considers each spouse’s contributions, needs, and circumstances. Short marriages between equal earners may approach 50/50. Long marriages with significant income disparity rarely do.
Call (470) 560-7798 to get an honest assessment of what equitable distribution looks like for your specific marital estate.
What is considered marital property in Georgia?
Marital property includes all assets and debts acquired during the marriage by either spouse, regardless of whose name is on the title. Income, real estate, vehicles, bank accounts, retirement contributions during the marriage, and marital debt are all subject to division. Gifts between spouses during marriage are also marital property.
Can I keep my inheritance in a Georgia divorce?
Generally yes, if you kept it separate. Inheritance is typically separate property in Georgia. However, if you deposited inherited funds into a joint account, used them to improve marital property, or commingled them with marital assets, the inheritance may lose its separate character. Tracing records are critical.
How is a business divided in a Georgia divorce?
The business must be valued, typically through income, market, or asset-based methods. If the business was started or grown during the marriage, its value (or the increase in value during the marriage) is marital property. The owner may be able to keep the business by offsetting its value with other marital assets. Business valuation disputes require forensic accounting expertise.
What is a QDRO and do I need one?
A Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) is a court order that directs a retirement plan administrator to transfer a portion of a retirement account to the non-employee spouse during divorce. You need a QDRO to divide 401(k)s, pensions, and similar employer-sponsored plans without triggering taxes or penalties. QDROs must be drafted precisely. Errors are costly and common.
What happens if my spouse is hiding assets?
Georgia courts can compel disclosure through discovery, subpoenas, and depositions. If a spouse is found to have deliberately concealed or dissipated marital assets, the court can award a larger share of the known estate to the wronged spouse. Forensic accountants can trace hidden funds through bank records, tax returns, and business financials.
Our attorneys are here to provide clear answers. Contact us for a confidential consultation about your family law case.
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Asset division determines your financial life after divorce. Whether you need to value a business, trace commingled property, draft a QDRO, or uncover hidden assets, Tannen Law Group has the experience and resources to protect your interests.
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