Premarital Home Purchase

Premarital Home Purchase

If you are getting a divorce, you may be worried about how your things are going to be divided. If you have a premarital home purchase, here is what you should know about how that might get divided.

Dividing a Premarital Home Purchase

What happens if two spouses purchased a home together before they were married? Today, this scenario occurs more and more often. Parties who decide to live together for a long period of time have saved their money and buy a condo – or they actually purchase a home – prior to marriage; a premarital home 

purchase. People who are really planning their lives wisely will enter into some sort of prenuptial agreement which will incorporate the factual scenario that surrounded the purchase of this premarital property.

For instance, they might say, “Wife contributed $50,000 toward the down payment, and husband contributed $50,000 toward the down payment.” That clarifies that both parties came into the purchase equally and, even though they weren’t married at the time, they are now married, and they’re divorcing. Because their equal contributions are clearly spelled out, the proceeds from the sale of that premarital home purchase will probably be divided equally.

We run into difficulties when there’s a disparity in the way the two parties funded the down payment for this premarital asset – or one spouse funded the premarital asset completely, perhaps by depleting a retirement account and using all of those funds for the down payment for the home). Now that they’re getting divorced, the spouse who did that wants to recoup the money, and the other spouse says, “No, no, no.” It is a fact-sensitive question, and the length of time the parties lived as man and wife in that house is tremendously important.

A scenario in which just two years have passed from the time the marital asset was liquidated and it all went into this home, is much different than one in which the couple has been married 22 years and lived in the home. All of these fact-sensitive issues really must be discussed with your attorney in the event of a divorce if you hope to arrive at a fair treatment of this premarital asset.

If you have any questions about your premarital home purchase, please call and set up a free consultation with our New Jersey Divorce Attorney Tanya Freeman.

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