Mortgage Resources for Family Law Attorneys

When real property is involved, the mortgage question can’t wait.

Nearly every divorce involving a home comes down to the same question: can one spouse qualify to keep it — and on what terms? We provide family law attorneys with the analysis tools and mortgage expertise to answer that question before a settlement agreement is drafted, not after.

  • Preliminary income analysis before the MSA is finalized
  • Response within one business day
  • Confidential referral process — no contact with your client until you make the introduction
  • Experience with buyout refinances, assumptions, and QDRO-adjacent planning
The three mortgage scenarios in every divorce
  • One spouse keeps the home
  • The home is sold
  • Both remain on the mortgage temporarily

Each scenario has different mortgage implications, qualification requirements, and timeline considerations. The tools below address all three.

Go to Calculators & Tools

The Three Mortgage Scenarios in Every Divorce

Before a marital settlement agreement can be finalized, the parties need to understand which of these three paths is actually viable — not just which one they prefer. A settlement built around an assumption the staying spouse can qualify may need to be restructured entirely if the numbers don’t work.

One Spouse Keeps the Home

The staying spouse refinances into their name only and pays the departing spouse their equity share at closing. They must qualify on their income alone, at current market rates, for a loan that includes the buyout amount.

Run the buyout numbers →

The Home Is Sold

Both spouses sell and divide the net proceeds after commissions, closing costs, and mortgage payoff. Capital gains tax exposure depends on timing — selling while married versus after the decree can mean a $250K difference in the available exclusion.

Calculate net proceeds →

Both Remain on the Mortgage Temporarily

One spouse stays in the home while both remain legally obligated on the mortgage, with a defined deadline for refinance or sale. The departing spouse’s credit remains exposed until the refinance closes — regardless of what the MSA says.

Discuss your client’s situation →

Divorce Mortgage Calculators

These tools are designed for use during active cases. Run preliminary numbers before the settlement is drafted — not after it’s signed. All calculations are estimates; actual qualification depends on full underwriting.

Home Equity Buyout Calculator

When one spouse keeps the home, the departing spouse must be paid their equity share. Two paths exist: a cash-out refinance replaces the existing mortgage with a new larger loan; a HELOC keeps the existing mortgage in place and adds a second lien for the buyout amount.

Home Value Current appraised or agreed market value
$
Existing Mortgage Balance Total payoff amount on all mortgages against the home
$
Departing Spouse’s Equity Share Percentage of net equity owed to the departing spouse per MSA
%
Current Mortgage Rate Interest rate on the existing mortgage being kept in place
%
Remaining Mortgage Term Years remaining on the existing mortgage
HELOC Rate Variable rate on the home equity line (prime + margin, typically 8–10%)
%
Enter home value and mortgage balance to see the buyout figures.
Important. The calculators on this page provide estimates for planning purposes only and do not constitute mortgage approval, tax advice, or legal advice. Actual mortgage qualification depends on full underwriting including credit review, income documentation, appraisal, and program-specific requirements. Capital gains tax estimates are illustrative and do not account for all applicable rules — clients should confirm tax implications with their CPA before settlement is finalized. Loan assumption processing times are estimates and vary by servicer. VA entitlement rules are complex; consult a VA-approved lender for case-specific guidance.  ·  Reed Letson NMLS #1655924 | Ryan Nash NMLS #1493480 | Xpert Home Lending NMLS #2179191. Verify licenses at NMLS Consumer Access.

What Divorce Attorneys Need to Know About Mortgages

Why the MSA Must Address the Mortgage Before It’s Finalized

A marital settlement agreement that awards the home to one spouse without confirming that spouse can qualify for a refinance creates significant downstream risk. If the staying spouse cannot qualify — because their income is too low, their debts are too high, or their credit has been damaged — the settlement may need to be reopened, causing delays, additional legal fees, and client stress.

We offer a preliminary income and qualification analysis at no cost, before the MSA is finalized, so the mortgage reality is confirmed before the agreement is signed.

Alimony and Child Support as Qualifying Income

Support payments can be used as qualifying income for a mortgage — but only under specific conditions. The support must be documented by a divorce decree or court order, must have been received consistently (typically 6 months of receipts), and must be expected to continue for at least 3 years from the application date.

This has a direct implication for MSA drafting: the income cannot be used until a court order is in place. A borrower relying on support income to qualify for a buyout refinance should have the decree finalized before applying for the mortgage.

Conversely, support paid by the staying spouse is counted as a monthly debt obligation, which reduces their qualifying income. Both sides of the support equation affect mortgage qualification.

The Departing Spouse’s Credit Exposure

As long as both spouses remain on a mortgage, both are equally liable. A missed payment or default affects both credit profiles regardless of what the MSA says. Courts cannot override the lender’s contract — a divorce decree requiring one spouse to pay the mortgage does not remove the other spouse’s obligation to the lender.

When a settlement requires one spouse to remain on the mortgage temporarily, the MSA should include: a defined refinance deadline, consequences for non-compliance, and an indemnification clause. Even with these protections, the departing spouse’s credit remains exposed until the refinance is completed.

The departing spouse’s unresolved mortgage obligation may also affect their ability to qualify for new housing — lenders count the existing payment as a liability even if the MSA assigns it to the other spouse.

VA Loans in Divorce — Special Considerations

VA loans present unique issues in divorce. If the veteran is the departing spouse and the non-veteran staying spouse cannot qualify for a refinance, they may attempt to assume the VA loan — but this leaves the veteran’s entitlement tied up until the loan is paid off, potentially limiting their ability to use VA financing again.

If another veteran assumes the loan and substitutes their entitlement, the original veteran’s entitlement can be restored. This requires VA approval and specific documentation. We work with veteran clients on these scenarios regularly.

IRC Section 1041 — The Hidden Tax Liability in Spouse-to-Spouse Transfers

When one spouse transfers the home to the other as part of a divorce settlement — rather than selling it — the transfer is tax-free at the time of transfer under IRC Section 1041. There is no capital gains event. However, the receiving spouse takes the transferor’s original cost basis, not the current market value.

This matters when the receiving spouse eventually sells the home. The gain is measured from the original purchase price (plus capital improvements), not from the home’s value at the time of the divorce. A home purchased for $300,000 that is worth $700,000 at the time of the divorce carries $400,000 of embedded gain — all of which is taxable to the receiving spouse when they sell, reduced only by their $250,000 single-filer exclusion at that time.

An MSA that assigns the home to one spouse in exchange for other marital assets should account for this embedded liability. In many cases, the tax exposure significantly changes the economics of what appears to be an equal split. Advise the receiving spouse to confirm the carryover basis and projected tax exposure with their CPA before the settlement is finalized.

Common Questions from Attorneys

Is there a cost for the preliminary analysis?

No. The preliminary analysis is provided at no cost to you or your client, with no obligation to proceed. Our goal is to give you reliable mortgage information before the settlement is drafted — not to pressure anyone into a loan.

What information do you need to run it?

Just the basics: whether one spouse is keeping or selling, approximate home value and existing mortgage balance, and a general sense of the staying spouse’s income situation. You don’t need to share a client name at this stage.

What does the preliminary analysis actually include?

A written summary covering the estimated qualifying loan amount based on the staying spouse’s income, estimated monthly payment, DTI analysis against major loan programs (Conventional, FHA, VA, USDA), and any issues that should be addressed in the MSA before it’s finalized. If qualification is borderline, we’ll say so clearly and explain what would change the outcome.

What if my client doesn’t qualify?

We’ll tell you plainly, with an explanation of what’s blocking qualification and whether there’s a path to fix it — a credit improvement timeline, a different loan program, or a structure that might work better. A clear “not yet, and here’s why” is more useful than a vague answer, and it gives you something concrete to work with in the settlement.

Which states do you cover?

Reed Letson is licensed in Colorado. Ryan Nash is licensed in both Colorado and Florida. Between the two of them, referrals in either state are covered.

How do I make the introduction when I’m ready?

However you prefer — email, phone, or copying us on a message to your client. We follow your lead on timing and method. If you’re not ready to introduce your client yet, a preliminary analysis can be run on facts alone and we’ll wait until you give the go-ahead before any client contact.

Who You’re Working With

When you refer a client, your professional reputation is on the line. Here’s who handles your referrals — two named, licensed mortgage brokers, not a call center or a rotating team of assistants.

Reed Letson, Mortgage Strategist

Reed Letson

Mortgage Strategist  ·  NMLS #1655924
Licensed in Colorado

Reed specializes in complex income files and difficult-to-qualify borrowers. He works directly with family law attorneys on buyout refinances, loan assumptions, and pre-settlement qualification analysis — providing the mortgage clarity you need before an MSA is finalized.

Ryan Nash, Mortgage Broker

Ryan Nash

Mortgage Broker  ·  NMLS #1493480
Licensed in Colorado & Florida

Ryan brings a methodical approach to every file — catching potential issues early before they become closing delays. He handles Florida referrals and works across conventional and complex-income scenarios in both states.

700+ Successful Closings
107 Five-Star Reviews
15.88 Average CTC (Days)
4.88★ Average Rating
How referral information is handled
  • We do not contact your client until you make the introduction — or they reach out directly.
  • Client information is never shared with third parties or used for any purpose beyond the mortgage analysis.
  • A preliminary analysis can be run on anonymous facts — no client name required at that stage.
  • With your client’s permission, we copy you on every key milestone from application through closing.

How to Refer a Client

We understand that referrals in family law require discretion. You control how and when your client is contacted, and we communicate back to you at every stage.

1
Contact us with the basics

A brief email or call with the key facts: one spouse keeping or selling, approximate home value and mortgage balance, staying spouse’s general income situation. You don’t need to share a client name at this stage.

2
We run a preliminary analysis

Within one business day, we’ll give you a preliminary read on whether the staying spouse is likely to qualify, what loan amount is feasible, and any issues to address in the MSA before it’s finalized. This is provided at no cost and with no obligation.

3
Client introduction — on your terms

When you’re ready to introduce your client, we work at their pace. We understand divorce clients are managing significant stress. We never pressure, never rush, and always keep you informed.

4
You stay in the loop

With your client’s permission, we copy you on key milestones: application received, appraisal ordered, loan approved, clear to close, and closing date confirmed.

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