For most couples, the family home is the most significant asset in a divorce. It’s also often the most emotionally charged. Wisconsin’s marital property law governs how the home is treated — but the outcome depends heavily on the specific facts of your situation and how the case is handled.
The Marital Property Presumption
Wisconsin is a marital property state. Property acquired during the marriage is generally presumed to be owned equally by both spouses, regardless of whose name is on the deed or mortgage. This means the equity in a home purchased during the marriage is typically divided equally in a divorce.
Pre-Marital Property and Contributions
If one spouse owned the home before the marriage, or if one spouse made a significant separate property contribution (such as an inheritance used for the down payment), that spouse may have a claim to a larger share. Tracing separate property contributions requires documentation — bank records, gift letters, and similar evidence.
The Three Main Options
Sell and divide. The home is sold and the net proceeds are split. This is the cleanest resolution but requires both parties to vacate and accepts whatever the market offers.
One spouse buys out the other. One spouse keeps the home and pays the other their share of the equity, either in cash or by offsetting other assets. This requires the keeping spouse to qualify for refinancing in their own name.
Deferred sale. The parties agree to delay the sale — often until children finish school. This requires careful drafting of the agreement to address maintenance costs, mortgage payments, and what happens if one party fails to pay.
The Mortgage Problem
Even if a divorce decree assigns the home to one spouse, the mortgage remains the legal obligation of both parties until refinanced. If the spouse keeping the home stops paying, it damages both credit scores and exposes the other spouse to collection. This is one of the most common post-divorce financial disasters — and it’s preventable with properly drafted agreements.
Attorney Christopher Carson handles property division in divorce cases throughout Waukesha and Milwaukee counties. Call (262) 860-8932.