"The Most Trusted

Name in Online Divorce"

Exclusive

Online Divorce Partner

Best

Online Divorce Service

ADVISOR

We offer an online guided path through divorce that helps couples avoid unnecessary conflict and costs.

Written By:

Divorce.com Staff

Wisconsin Property Division Calculator

Asset & Debt Splitter

Calculate how your marital assets and debts might be divided in divorce. This tool provides estimates for educational purposes only.

Quick Actions

Apply these splits to all assets or debts at once. You can still customize individual items afterward.

Apply to All Assets:

Apply to All Debts:

Assets

$
$
Total Assets:$0

Debts

$
$
Total Debts:$0

Division Results

Total Assets
$0
Total Debts
$0
Net Worth
$0

Spouse 1

Assets:$0
Debts:$0
Net Amount:$0

Spouse 2

Assets:$0
Debts:$0
Net Amount:$0

Important: This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes only. Actual division of assets and debts in divorce varies by state law, individual circumstances, and court decisions. Consult with a qualified divorce attorney for advice specific to your situation.

Wisconsin uses Community Property. Understanding how courts divide assets and debts helps negotiate fair settlement.

Wisconsin Property Division System

Wisconsin is a community property state that presumes 50-50 equal split of all community property and debts acquired during marriage. Both spouses own community property equally regardless of whose name is on title.

Marital vs Separate Property

Marital Property Includes: Assets and debts acquired during marriage from date of marriage to date of separation or filing. Real estate purchased during marriage, retirement contributions during marriage, investment and bank accounts, vehicles, business interests, personal property, income earned during marriage, debts incurred during marriage.

Separate Property Includes: Property owned before marriage, inherited by one spouse, gifts to one spouse individually, personal injury settlements pain and suffering portion, property acquired after separation, property in valid prenuptial agreement. Separate property not divided.

Assets Subject to Division

Real Estate

Primary home valued at market value minus mortgage. Options: sell and split proceeds, one spouse keeps and buys out other through refinance, deferred sale until children graduate, continued co-ownership rare. Vacation homes rental properties investment land also divided.

Retirement Accounts

401k and pensions require QDRO to divide without taxes. IRAs transfer without QDRO through direct transfer. Portion earned during marriage is marital property. Professional valuation needed for pensions.

Bank and Investment Accounts

Checking savings brokerage accounts stocks bonds mutual funds cryptocurrency. Even if in one name, deposits during marriage are marital. Must trace separate deposits to exclude.

Vehicles and Personal Property

Cars trucks boats RVs motorcycles valued at fair market value minus loans. Furniture appliances electronics jewelry collectibles. Often divided by agreement.

Business Interests

Business ownership requires professional valuation 5000-15000 dollars. Options: one keeps and buys out other, sell to third party, continue co-ownership rare.

Debt Division

All debts incurred during marriage subject to division. Mortgages credit cards auto loans student loans medical debt. Both spouses liable to creditors even after divorce until refinanced.

Wisconsin Specific Rules

Community Property Rules: Wisconsin presumes equal 50-50 split of all community property and debts. This is mandatory unless both spouses agree to different division. Courts cannot order unequal split without consent in most cases.

Separate Property Protection: Property owned before marriage or inherited remains separate. However commingling separate with community property can convert it to community. Must maintain clear separation and documentation.

Date of Valuation: Date of separation or filing typically controls. Affects appreciation or depreciation between dates.

Burden of Proof: Spouse claiming property is separate must prove with documentation. Keep clear records of separate property sources.

Special Considerations

Marital Home

Sell and split proceeds, one spouse keeps with buyout, deferred sale until trigger event, or continued co-ownership. Most common is one keeps or sell. Requires refinance to remove spouse from mortgage.

Retirement Division

QDRO required for 401k pensions. Coverture fraction calculates marital portion based on years married divided by total career years. Present value or deferred distribution approaches available.

Business Valuation

Three approaches: asset-based income approach market approach. Enterprise goodwill is marital. Personal goodwill treatment varies. Avoid double-dipping if income used for child support.

Tax Implications

Property transfers incident to divorce not taxable. Receiving spouse takes over cost basis. Primary residence sale may qualify for capital gains exclusion up to 250000 per person. Retirement transfers tax-free if done correctly.

Using Asset and Debt Splitter

Calculator helps divide property fairly. List all assets with values, list all debts with balances, classify separate property, calculate net marital estate, allocate to each spouse, calculator tracks totals and shows if division equals 50-50, generates summary for settlement.

Common Mistakes

Not disclosing all assets, ignoring tax consequences, emotional attachment to low-value items, forgetting debt liability continues, not getting professional appraisals. Avoid these to achieve fair division.

When You Need Help

Complex assets like businesses stock options international property, hidden assets suspected, high conflict situations, unique property issues. Hire attorney forensic accountant or business valuator as needed.

Cost Information

DIY if agree: 500-3000 dollars including appraisals and filing. Mediation: 1500-7000 dollars total. Attorney consultation: 1000-3000 dollars. Full representation contested: 8000-25000 plus per spouse. Divorce.com uncontested: 499-1999 dollars saves thousands.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Q: Does Wisconsin use community property or equitable distribution? A: Wisconsin is community property state with 50-50 split presumption for all community assets and debts. Courts must divide equally unless both agree otherwise.

  • Q: What is marital property in Wisconsin? A: Property acquired during marriage from wedding to separation or filing. Includes real estate retirement accounts bank accounts vehicles business interests personal property debts. Excludes premarital inherited and gifted property.

  • Q: How is house divided in Wisconsin divorce? A: Four options: sell and split proceeds, one spouse keeps and refinances buying out other, deferred sale maintaining co-ownership until trigger, or continue co-owning rare. Most common one keeps or sell.

  • Q: Are retirement accounts divided in Wisconsin? A: Yes portion earned during marriage is marital property subject to division. 401k and pensions require QDRO. IRAs transfer without QDRO. No taxes or penalties if done correctly.

  • Q: What about separate property? A: Separate property owned before marriage inherited or gifted to one spouse remains with that spouse not divided. Must prove separate with documentation. Commingling can convert separate to marital.

  • Q: Are debts divided in Wisconsin divorce? A: Yes all debts incurred during marriage are marital debts subject to division. Includes mortgages credit cards auto loans student loans medical debt. Both spouses remain liable to creditors even after divorce until refinanced.

  • Q: How are businesses valued and divided? A: Business requires professional valuation costing 5000-15000 dollars using asset income or market approach. Options: one spouse buys out other, sell to third party, continue co-ownership rare. Goodwill treatment varies.

  • Q: What if spouse is hiding assets? A: Use discovery process interrogatories document requests subpoenas depositions. Hire forensic accountant for complex finances. Court can award hidden assets entirely to innocent spouse and impose penalties including attorney fees and contempt.

  • Q: Are property transfers taxable? A: No transfers between spouses incident to divorce are tax-free. Receiving spouse takes over cost basis. Future sale may trigger capital gains. Primary residence sale may qualify for 250000 exclusion per person.

  • Q: How does Asset and Debt Splitter help? A: Calculator helps allocate assets and debts fairly. Enter all property and debts, assign to each spouse, tracks totals, shows if division equals 50-50, calculates equalizer payment if needed, generates summary for settlement agreement.

Sheboygan County Divorce Guide: Sheboygan, Wisconsin Filing

St Croix County Divorce Guide: Hudson, Wisconsin Filing

Taylor County Divorce Guide: Medford, Wisconsin Filing

Trempealeau County Divorce Guide: Whitehall, Wisconsin Filing

Vernon County Divorce Guide: Viroqua, Wisconsin Filing

Vilas County Divorce Guide: Eagle River, Wisconsin Filing

Walworth County Divorce Guide: Elkhorn, Wisconsin Filing

Washburn County Divorce Guide: Shell Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Washington County Divorce Guide: West Bend, Wisconsin Filing

Waukesha County Divorce Guide: Waukesha, Wisconsin Filing

Waupaca County Divorce Guide: Waupaca, Wisconsin Filing

Waushara County Divorce Guide: Wautoma, Wisconsin Filing

Winnebago County Divorce Guide: Oshkosh, Wisconsin Filing

Wood County Divorce Guide: Rapids, Wisconsin Filing

Milwaukee County Divorce Guide: Milwaukee, Wisconsin Filing

Monroe County Divorce Guide: Sparta, Wisconsin Filing

Oconto County Divorce Guide: Oconto, Wisconsin Filing

Oneida County Divorce Guide: Rhinelander, Wisconsin Filing

Outagamie County Divorce Guide: Appleton, Wisconsin Filing

Ozaukee County Divorce Guide: Port Washington, Wisconsin Filing

Pierce County Divorce Guide: Ellsworth, Wisconsin Filing

Polk County Divorce Guide: Balsam Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Portage County Divorce Guide: Stevens Point, Wisconsin Filing

Price County Divorce Guide: Phillips, Wisconsin Filing

Racine County Divorce Guide: Racine, Wisconsin Filing

Rock County Divorce Guide: Janesville, Wisconsin Filing

Rusk County Divorce Guide: Ladysmith, Wisconsin Filing

Sauk County Divorce Guide: Baraboo, Wisconsin Filing

Sawyer County Divorce Guide: Hayward, Wisconsin Filing

Shawano County Divorce Guide: Shawano, Wisconsin Filing

Green Lake County Divorce Guide: Green Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Iowa County Divorce Guide: Dodgeville, Wisconsin Filing

Jackson County Divorce Guide: Black River Falls, Wisconsin Filing

Jefferson County Divorce Guide: Jefferson, Wisconsin Filing

Juneau County Divorce Guide: Mauston, Wisconsin Filing

Kenosha County Divorce Guide: Kenosha, Wisconsin Filing

Kewaunee County Divorce Guide: Kewaunee, Wisconsin Filing

La Crosse County Divorce Guide: La Crosse, Wisconsin Filing

Lafayette County Divorce Guide: Darlington, Wisconsin Filing

Langlade County Divorce Guide: Antigo, Wisconsin Filing

Lincoln County Divorce Guide: Merrill, Wisconsin Filing

Manitowoc County Divorce Guide: Manitowoc, Wisconsin Filing

Marathon County Divorce Guide: Wausau, Wisconsin Filing

Marinette County Divorce Guide: Marinette, Wisconsin Filing

Marquette County Divorce Guide: Montello, Wisconsin Filing

Calumet County Divorce Guide: Chilton, Wisconsin Filing

Chippewa County Divorce Guide: Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin Filing

Clark County Divorce Guide: Neillsville, Wisconsin Filing

Columbia County Divorce Guide: Portage, Wisconsin Filing

Crawford County Divorce Guide: Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin Filing

Dane County Divorce Guide: Madison, Wisconsin Filing

Dodge County Divorce Guide: Juneau, Wisconsin Filing

Door County Divorce Guide: Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin Filing

Douglas County Divorce Guide: Superior, Wisconsin Filing

Dunn County Divorce Guide: Menomonie, Wisconsin Filing

Eau Claire County Divorce Guide: au Claire, Wisconsin Filing

Florence County Divorce Guide: Florence, Wisconsin Filing

Fond du Lac County Divorce Guide: Fond du Lac, Wisconsin Filing

Grant County Divorce Guide: Lancaster, Wisconsin Filing

Green County Divorce Guide: Monroe, Wisconsin Filing

Adams County Divorce Guide: Friendship, Wisconsin Filing

Ashland County Divorce Guide: Ashland, Wisconsin Filing

Barron County Divorce Guide: Barron, Wisconsin Filing

Bayfield County Divorce Guide: Washburn, Wisconsin Filing

Brown County Divorce Guide: Green Bay, Wisconsin Filing

Buffalo County Divorce Guide: Alma, Wisconsin Filing

Burnett County Divorce Guide: Siren, Wisconsin Filing

Pepin County Divorce Guide: Durand, Wisconsin Filing

Richland County Divorce Guide: Richland Center, Wisconsin Filing

Menominee County Divorce Guide: Shawano, Wisconsin Filing

Forest County Divorce Guide: Crandon, Wisconsin Filing

Iron County Divorce Guide: Hurley, Wisconsin Filing

Other Articles:

Sheboygan County Divorce Guide: Sheboygan, Wisconsin Filing

St Croix County Divorce Guide: Hudson, Wisconsin Filing

Taylor County Divorce Guide: Medford, Wisconsin Filing

Trempealeau County Divorce Guide: Whitehall, Wisconsin Filing

Vernon County Divorce Guide: Viroqua, Wisconsin Filing

Vilas County Divorce Guide: Eagle River, Wisconsin Filing

Walworth County Divorce Guide: Elkhorn, Wisconsin Filing

Washburn County Divorce Guide: Shell Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Washington County Divorce Guide: West Bend, Wisconsin Filing

Waukesha County Divorce Guide: Waukesha, Wisconsin Filing

Waupaca County Divorce Guide: Waupaca, Wisconsin Filing

Waushara County Divorce Guide: Wautoma, Wisconsin Filing

Winnebago County Divorce Guide: Oshkosh, Wisconsin Filing

Wood County Divorce Guide: Rapids, Wisconsin Filing

Milwaukee County Divorce Guide: Milwaukee, Wisconsin Filing

Monroe County Divorce Guide: Sparta, Wisconsin Filing

Oconto County Divorce Guide: Oconto, Wisconsin Filing

Oneida County Divorce Guide: Rhinelander, Wisconsin Filing

Outagamie County Divorce Guide: Appleton, Wisconsin Filing

Ozaukee County Divorce Guide: Port Washington, Wisconsin Filing

Pierce County Divorce Guide: Ellsworth, Wisconsin Filing

Polk County Divorce Guide: Balsam Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Portage County Divorce Guide: Stevens Point, Wisconsin Filing

Price County Divorce Guide: Phillips, Wisconsin Filing

Racine County Divorce Guide: Racine, Wisconsin Filing

Rock County Divorce Guide: Janesville, Wisconsin Filing

Rusk County Divorce Guide: Ladysmith, Wisconsin Filing

Sauk County Divorce Guide: Baraboo, Wisconsin Filing

Sawyer County Divorce Guide: Hayward, Wisconsin Filing

Shawano County Divorce Guide: Shawano, Wisconsin Filing

Green Lake County Divorce Guide: Green Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Iowa County Divorce Guide: Dodgeville, Wisconsin Filing

Jackson County Divorce Guide: Black River Falls, Wisconsin Filing

Jefferson County Divorce Guide: Jefferson, Wisconsin Filing

Juneau County Divorce Guide: Mauston, Wisconsin Filing

Kenosha County Divorce Guide: Kenosha, Wisconsin Filing

Kewaunee County Divorce Guide: Kewaunee, Wisconsin Filing

La Crosse County Divorce Guide: La Crosse, Wisconsin Filing

Lafayette County Divorce Guide: Darlington, Wisconsin Filing

Langlade County Divorce Guide: Antigo, Wisconsin Filing

Lincoln County Divorce Guide: Merrill, Wisconsin Filing

Manitowoc County Divorce Guide: Manitowoc, Wisconsin Filing

Marathon County Divorce Guide: Wausau, Wisconsin Filing

Marinette County Divorce Guide: Marinette, Wisconsin Filing

Marquette County Divorce Guide: Montello, Wisconsin Filing

Calumet County Divorce Guide: Chilton, Wisconsin Filing

Chippewa County Divorce Guide: Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin Filing

Clark County Divorce Guide: Neillsville, Wisconsin Filing

Columbia County Divorce Guide: Portage, Wisconsin Filing

Crawford County Divorce Guide: Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin Filing

Dane County Divorce Guide: Madison, Wisconsin Filing

Dodge County Divorce Guide: Juneau, Wisconsin Filing

Door County Divorce Guide: Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin Filing

Douglas County Divorce Guide: Superior, Wisconsin Filing

Dunn County Divorce Guide: Menomonie, Wisconsin Filing

Eau Claire County Divorce Guide: au Claire, Wisconsin Filing

Florence County Divorce Guide: Florence, Wisconsin Filing

Fond du Lac County Divorce Guide: Fond du Lac, Wisconsin Filing

Grant County Divorce Guide: Lancaster, Wisconsin Filing

Green County Divorce Guide: Monroe, Wisconsin Filing

Adams County Divorce Guide: Friendship, Wisconsin Filing

Ashland County Divorce Guide: Ashland, Wisconsin Filing

Barron County Divorce Guide: Barron, Wisconsin Filing

Bayfield County Divorce Guide: Washburn, Wisconsin Filing

Brown County Divorce Guide: Green Bay, Wisconsin Filing

Buffalo County Divorce Guide: Alma, Wisconsin Filing

Burnett County Divorce Guide: Siren, Wisconsin Filing

Pepin County Divorce Guide: Durand, Wisconsin Filing

Richland County Divorce Guide: Richland Center, Wisconsin Filing

Menominee County Divorce Guide: Shawano, Wisconsin Filing

Forest County Divorce Guide: Crandon, Wisconsin Filing

Iron County Divorce Guide: Hurley, Wisconsin Filing

Other Articles:

RETAINER FEE


PETITION





COURT FILING FEE

SUMMONS


AFFIDAVIT


MOTIONS


ARGUMENTS


TEMPORARY ORDERS

HEARINGS


SUBPOENAS


DEPOSITIONS


SETTLEMENT

CONFERENCES

JUDGEMENT





TRIAL


APPEALS

Real Answers. Real Support.

We're here to guide you through every step of divorce — whether you're just starting to explore your options or ready to take the next step. Our blog offers expert insights, practical tips, and real-life stories to help you move forward with clarity and confidence.

Upfront pricing at a fraction of the cost of traditional divorce

Divorce doesn’t have to cost as much as a car.

Traditional Divorce

$25-$30k

Divorce.com

$499

-

$1,999

Our Services

We've helped with

over 1 million divorces

We provide everything you need to get divorced — from conflict resolution to filing support and access to divorce experts — in one comprehensive, convenient online platform.

Proudly featured in these publications

Why Divorce.com

Services

Resources

Online Divorce

Divorce Guides

States

We offer a simple divorce online for uncontested or lightly contested divorces.

"The Most Trusted

Name in Online Divorce"

Exclusive

Online Divorce Partner

Best

Online Divorce Service

ADVISOR

We offer a guided path through divorce that helps avoid unnecessary conflict and costs.

Written By:

Divorce.com Staff

Wisconsin Property Division Calculator

Wisconsin uses Community Property. Understanding how courts divide assets and debts helps negotiate fair settlement.

Asset & Debt Splitter

Calculate how your marital assets and debts might be divided in divorce. This tool provides estimates for educational purposes only.

Quick Actions

Apply these splits to all assets or debts at once. You can still customize individual items afterward.

Apply to All Assets:

Apply to All Debts:

Assets

$
$
Total Assets:$0

Debts

$
$
Total Debts:$0

Division Results

Total Assets
$0
Total Debts
$0
Net Worth
$0

Spouse 1

Assets:$0
Debts:$0
Net Amount:$0

Spouse 2

Assets:$0
Debts:$0
Net Amount:$0

Important: This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes only. Actual division of assets and debts in divorce varies by state law, individual circumstances, and court decisions. Consult with a qualified divorce attorney for advice specific to your situation.

Wisconsin Property Division System

Wisconsin is a community property state that presumes 50-50 equal split of all community property and debts acquired during marriage. Both spouses own community property equally regardless of whose name is on title.

Marital vs Separate Property

Marital Property Includes: Assets and debts acquired during marriage from date of marriage to date of separation or filing. Real estate purchased during marriage, retirement contributions during marriage, investment and bank accounts, vehicles, business interests, personal property, income earned during marriage, debts incurred during marriage.

Separate Property Includes: Property owned before marriage, inherited by one spouse, gifts to one spouse individually, personal injury settlements pain and suffering portion, property acquired after separation, property in valid prenuptial agreement. Separate property not divided.

Assets Subject to Division

Real Estate

Primary home valued at market value minus mortgage. Options: sell and split proceeds, one spouse keeps and buys out other through refinance, deferred sale until children graduate, continued co-ownership rare. Vacation homes rental properties investment land also divided.

Retirement Accounts

401k and pensions require QDRO to divide without taxes. IRAs transfer without QDRO through direct transfer. Portion earned during marriage is marital property. Professional valuation needed for pensions.

Bank and Investment Accounts

Checking savings brokerage accounts stocks bonds mutual funds cryptocurrency. Even if in one name, deposits during marriage are marital. Must trace separate deposits to exclude.

Vehicles and Personal Property

Cars trucks boats RVs motorcycles valued at fair market value minus loans. Furniture appliances electronics jewelry collectibles. Often divided by agreement.

Business Interests

Business ownership requires professional valuation 5000-15000 dollars. Options: one keeps and buys out other, sell to third party, continue co-ownership rare.

Debt Division

All debts incurred during marriage subject to division. Mortgages credit cards auto loans student loans medical debt. Both spouses liable to creditors even after divorce until refinanced.

Wisconsin Specific Rules

Community Property Rules: Wisconsin presumes equal 50-50 split of all community property and debts. This is mandatory unless both spouses agree to different division. Courts cannot order unequal split without consent in most cases.

Separate Property Protection: Property owned before marriage or inherited remains separate. However commingling separate with community property can convert it to community. Must maintain clear separation and documentation.

Date of Valuation: Date of separation or filing typically controls. Affects appreciation or depreciation between dates.

Burden of Proof: Spouse claiming property is separate must prove with documentation. Keep clear records of separate property sources.

Special Considerations

Marital Home

Sell and split proceeds, one spouse keeps with buyout, deferred sale until trigger event, or continued co-ownership. Most common is one keeps or sell. Requires refinance to remove spouse from mortgage.

Retirement Division

QDRO required for 401k pensions. Coverture fraction calculates marital portion based on years married divided by total career years. Present value or deferred distribution approaches available.

Business Valuation

Three approaches: asset-based income approach market approach. Enterprise goodwill is marital. Personal goodwill treatment varies. Avoid double-dipping if income used for child support.

Tax Implications

Property transfers incident to divorce not taxable. Receiving spouse takes over cost basis. Primary residence sale may qualify for capital gains exclusion up to 250000 per person. Retirement transfers tax-free if done correctly.

Using Asset and Debt Splitter

Calculator helps divide property fairly. List all assets with values, list all debts with balances, classify separate property, calculate net marital estate, allocate to each spouse, calculator tracks totals and shows if division equals 50-50, generates summary for settlement.

Common Mistakes

Not disclosing all assets, ignoring tax consequences, emotional attachment to low-value items, forgetting debt liability continues, not getting professional appraisals. Avoid these to achieve fair division.

When You Need Help

Complex assets like businesses stock options international property, hidden assets suspected, high conflict situations, unique property issues. Hire attorney forensic accountant or business valuator as needed.

Cost Information

DIY if agree: 500-3000 dollars including appraisals and filing. Mediation: 1500-7000 dollars total. Attorney consultation: 1000-3000 dollars. Full representation contested: 8000-25000 plus per spouse. Divorce.com uncontested: 499-1999 dollars saves thousands.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Q: Does Wisconsin use community property or equitable distribution? A: Wisconsin is community property state with 50-50 split presumption for all community assets and debts. Courts must divide equally unless both agree otherwise.

  • Q: What is marital property in Wisconsin? A: Property acquired during marriage from wedding to separation or filing. Includes real estate retirement accounts bank accounts vehicles business interests personal property debts. Excludes premarital inherited and gifted property.

  • Q: How is house divided in Wisconsin divorce? A: Four options: sell and split proceeds, one spouse keeps and refinances buying out other, deferred sale maintaining co-ownership until trigger, or continue co-owning rare. Most common one keeps or sell.

  • Q: Are retirement accounts divided in Wisconsin? A: Yes portion earned during marriage is marital property subject to division. 401k and pensions require QDRO. IRAs transfer without QDRO. No taxes or penalties if done correctly.

  • Q: What about separate property? A: Separate property owned before marriage inherited or gifted to one spouse remains with that spouse not divided. Must prove separate with documentation. Commingling can convert separate to marital.

  • Q: Are debts divided in Wisconsin divorce? A: Yes all debts incurred during marriage are marital debts subject to division. Includes mortgages credit cards auto loans student loans medical debt. Both spouses remain liable to creditors even after divorce until refinanced.

  • Q: How are businesses valued and divided? A: Business requires professional valuation costing 5000-15000 dollars using asset income or market approach. Options: one spouse buys out other, sell to third party, continue co-ownership rare. Goodwill treatment varies.

  • Q: What if spouse is hiding assets? A: Use discovery process interrogatories document requests subpoenas depositions. Hire forensic accountant for complex finances. Court can award hidden assets entirely to innocent spouse and impose penalties including attorney fees and contempt.

  • Q: Are property transfers taxable? A: No transfers between spouses incident to divorce are tax-free. Receiving spouse takes over cost basis. Future sale may trigger capital gains. Primary residence sale may qualify for 250000 exclusion per person.

  • Q: How does Asset and Debt Splitter help? A: Calculator helps allocate assets and debts fairly. Enter all property and debts, assign to each spouse, tracks totals, shows if division equals 50-50, calculates equalizer payment if needed, generates summary for settlement agreement.

RETAINER FEE


PETITION





COURT FILING FEE

SUMMONS


AFFIDAVIT


MOTIONS


ARGUMENTS


TEMPORARY ORDERS

HEARINGS


SUBPOENAS


DEPOSITIONS


SETTLEMENT

CONFERENCES

JUDGEMENT





TRIAL


APPEALS

RETAINER FEE


PETITION





COURT FILING FEE

SUMMONS


AFFIDAVIT


MOTIONS


ARGUMENTS


TEMPORARY ORDERS

HEARINGS


SUBPOENAS


DEPOSITIONS


SETTLEMENT

CONFERENCES

JUDGEMENT





TRIAL


APPEALS

Other Articles:

Sheboygan County Divorce Guide: Sheboygan, Wisconsin Filing

St Croix County Divorce Guide: Hudson, Wisconsin Filing

Taylor County Divorce Guide: Medford, Wisconsin Filing

Trempealeau County Divorce Guide: Whitehall, Wisconsin Filing

Vernon County Divorce Guide: Viroqua, Wisconsin Filing

Vilas County Divorce Guide: Eagle River, Wisconsin Filing

Walworth County Divorce Guide: Elkhorn, Wisconsin Filing

Washburn County Divorce Guide: Shell Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Washington County Divorce Guide: West Bend, Wisconsin Filing

Waukesha County Divorce Guide: Waukesha, Wisconsin Filing

Waupaca County Divorce Guide: Waupaca, Wisconsin Filing

Waushara County Divorce Guide: Wautoma, Wisconsin Filing

Winnebago County Divorce Guide: Oshkosh, Wisconsin Filing

Wood County Divorce Guide: Rapids, Wisconsin Filing

Milwaukee County Divorce Guide: Milwaukee, Wisconsin Filing

Monroe County Divorce Guide: Sparta, Wisconsin Filing

Oconto County Divorce Guide: Oconto, Wisconsin Filing

Oneida County Divorce Guide: Rhinelander, Wisconsin Filing

Outagamie County Divorce Guide: Appleton, Wisconsin Filing

Ozaukee County Divorce Guide: Port Washington, Wisconsin Filing

Pierce County Divorce Guide: Ellsworth, Wisconsin Filing

Polk County Divorce Guide: Balsam Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Portage County Divorce Guide: Stevens Point, Wisconsin Filing

Price County Divorce Guide: Phillips, Wisconsin Filing

Racine County Divorce Guide: Racine, Wisconsin Filing

Rock County Divorce Guide: Janesville, Wisconsin Filing

Rusk County Divorce Guide: Ladysmith, Wisconsin Filing

Sauk County Divorce Guide: Baraboo, Wisconsin Filing

Sawyer County Divorce Guide: Hayward, Wisconsin Filing

Shawano County Divorce Guide: Shawano, Wisconsin Filing

Green Lake County Divorce Guide: Green Lake, Wisconsin Filing

Iowa County Divorce Guide: Dodgeville, Wisconsin Filing

Jackson County Divorce Guide: Black River Falls, Wisconsin Filing

Jefferson County Divorce Guide: Jefferson, Wisconsin Filing

Juneau County Divorce Guide: Mauston, Wisconsin Filing

Kenosha County Divorce Guide: Kenosha, Wisconsin Filing

Kewaunee County Divorce Guide: Kewaunee, Wisconsin Filing

La Crosse County Divorce Guide: La Crosse, Wisconsin Filing

Lafayette County Divorce Guide: Darlington, Wisconsin Filing

Langlade County Divorce Guide: Antigo, Wisconsin Filing

Lincoln County Divorce Guide: Merrill, Wisconsin Filing

Manitowoc County Divorce Guide: Manitowoc, Wisconsin Filing

Marathon County Divorce Guide: Wausau, Wisconsin Filing

Marinette County Divorce Guide: Marinette, Wisconsin Filing

Marquette County Divorce Guide: Montello, Wisconsin Filing

Calumet County Divorce Guide: Chilton, Wisconsin Filing

Chippewa County Divorce Guide: Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin Filing

Clark County Divorce Guide: Neillsville, Wisconsin Filing

Columbia County Divorce Guide: Portage, Wisconsin Filing

Crawford County Divorce Guide: Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin Filing

Dane County Divorce Guide: Madison, Wisconsin Filing

Dodge County Divorce Guide: Juneau, Wisconsin Filing

Door County Divorce Guide: Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin Filing

Douglas County Divorce Guide: Superior, Wisconsin Filing

Dunn County Divorce Guide: Menomonie, Wisconsin Filing

Eau Claire County Divorce Guide: au Claire, Wisconsin Filing

Florence County Divorce Guide: Florence, Wisconsin Filing

Fond du Lac County Divorce Guide: Fond du Lac, Wisconsin Filing

Grant County Divorce Guide: Lancaster, Wisconsin Filing

Green County Divorce Guide: Monroe, Wisconsin Filing

Adams County Divorce Guide: Friendship, Wisconsin Filing

Ashland County Divorce Guide: Ashland, Wisconsin Filing

Barron County Divorce Guide: Barron, Wisconsin Filing

Bayfield County Divorce Guide: Washburn, Wisconsin Filing

Brown County Divorce Guide: Green Bay, Wisconsin Filing

Buffalo County Divorce Guide: Alma, Wisconsin Filing

Burnett County Divorce Guide: Siren, Wisconsin Filing

Pepin County Divorce Guide: Durand, Wisconsin Filing

Richland County Divorce Guide: Richland Center, Wisconsin Filing

Menominee County Divorce Guide: Shawano, Wisconsin Filing

Forest County Divorce Guide: Crandon, Wisconsin Filing

Iron County Divorce Guide: Hurley, Wisconsin Filing

Upfront pricing at a fraction of the cost of traditional divorce

Divorce doesn’t have to cost as much as a car.

Traditional Divorce

$25-$30k

Divorce.com

$499

-

$1,999

Real Answers. Real Support.

We're here to guide you through every step of divorce — whether you're just starting to explore your options or ready to take the next step. Our blog offers expert insights, practical tips, and real-life stories to help you move forward with clarity and confidence.

Our Services

Chair icon

Paperwork Only

Basic access to divorce paperwork where you handle the rigorous filing process with the court.

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We File For You

Our most popular package includes a dedicated case manager, automated court filing, spouse signature collection, and personalized documentation.

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Fully Guided

Complete divorce support including mediation sessions, dedicated case management, court filing, and personalized documentation.

We've helped with

over 1 million divorces

We provide everything you need to get divorced — from conflict resolution to filing support and access to divorce experts — in one comprehensive, convenient online platform.

Proudly featured in these publications