Family Law

Hidden Assets in Michigan Divorce: How Forensic Accountants Find What's Missing

April 2026 Updated 2026-04-14 7 min read
Quick Answer

Asset concealment in divorce is more common than most people realize. The National Endowment for Financial Education (NEFE) found that approximately one in three adults who have combined finances with a partner admit to financial deception. In a Michigan divorce, both spouses are required to make full financial disclosure. When one spouse fails to do so, forensic accountants use lifestyle analysis, cash flow reconstruction, and document tracing to uncover hidden income, undervalued assets, and undisclosed accounts. The consequences for hiding assets in a Michigan divorce are severe — courts can impose sanctions, award a larger share to the honest spouse, and reopen final judgments when concealment is discovered after the fact.

If something does not add up in your spouse's financial disclosures, it usually does not add up for a reason. The National Endowment for Financial Education (NEFE) found that approximately one in three adults who have combined finances with a partner admit to some form of financial deception — whether hiding purchases, maintaining secret accounts, or misrepresenting income. In a high-asset divorce, the incentive to conceal assets is substantial, and the methods can be sophisticated.

Michigan law requires full financial disclosure in divorce proceedings. When one spouse fails to meet that obligation, forensic accounting tools can uncover what is missing — and the consequences for the spouse who concealed assets can be severe.

Common Methods of Concealment

Asset hiding in high-net-worth divorces follows recognizable patterns. Understanding these methods is the first step in identifying them.

Undervaluing a Business

The most common form of concealment for business-owning spouses. Methods include:

A forensic accountant compares reported revenue to industry benchmarks, traces deposits against invoices, and identifies expense patterns that deviate from the business's historical norms.

Deferring Income

Executives and high-income earners may defer compensation to reduce their apparent income during the divorce:

Transferring Assets to Third Parties

Moving assets out of the marital estate by transferring them to family members, friends, or entities:

Cryptocurrency and Digital Assets

Digital assets present unique concealment challenges:

Despite these challenges, forensic specialists can trace blockchain transactions, identify exchange accounts through subpoenas, and detect transfers through pattern analysis.

Creating Phantom Debt

Fabricating liabilities to reduce the net marital estate:

The Forensic Accountant's Toolkit

When asset concealment is suspected, a forensic accountant uses several analytical approaches to find what is missing.

Lifestyle Analysis

The most intuitive approach: compare reported income and assets to the family's actual lifestyle. If a family lives in a $2 million home, drives luxury vehicles, takes expensive vacations, pays private school tuition, and belongs to a country club — but the reported income cannot support that lifestyle — the gap represents undisclosed income or assets.

The forensic accountant documents all known expenses, compares them to reported income, and identifies the shortfall. The shortfall is the starting point for tracing the source of the hidden funds.

Bank Record Tracing

A systematic review of all bank accounts, credit cards, brokerage accounts, and financial transactions over a relevant period — typically 3-5 years. The forensic accountant looks for:

Tax Return Analysis

Tax returns are a powerful tool because they are sworn statements. A forensic accountant compares tax returns to bank records, business financial statements, and lifestyle expenditures to identify:

Public Records Search

A comprehensive search of public records can reveal undisclosed assets:

Discovery Tools Under Michigan Law

Michigan's court rules provide robust discovery tools for uncovering hidden assets.

Interrogatories — written questions that must be answered under oath. Targeted interrogatories about specific accounts, transactions, and asset categories force the concealing spouse to either disclose or commit perjury.

Requests for production (MCR 2.310) — demands for specific documents, including bank statements, tax returns, business records, brokerage statements, loan applications, and financial statements provided to third parties (like loan applications, which often overstate assets and income).

Subpoenas to third parties — subpoenas directed at banks, brokerages, employers, business partners, and other institutions that hold financial records. Third-party subpoenas are particularly effective because they bypass the concealing spouse entirely.

Depositions — sworn testimony under questioning. A skilled attorney conducting a deposition of a spouse suspected of hiding assets can identify inconsistencies, lock in statements, and create a record that can be used to impeach credibility at trial.

Consequences of Concealment

Michigan courts take asset concealment seriously, and the consequences can be severe.

Sanctions. Courts can impose monetary sanctions — including attorney fees and forensic accounting costs — on a spouse who fails to make required disclosures.

Adverse inferences. When a spouse destroys records, refuses to comply with discovery, or provides incomplete information, the court can draw adverse inferences — assuming that the missing information would have been unfavorable to the concealing spouse.

Disproportionate asset award. A court that finds one spouse hid assets can award a larger share of the marital estate to the honest spouse. The concealment itself becomes a factor in the equitable distribution analysis.

Reopening the judgment. Under MCR 2.612, a final divorce judgment can be reopened if fraud is discovered after the case is concluded. There is no statute of limitations for fraud in Michigan. If hidden assets are discovered years later, the court can modify the property division.

Criminal referral. Financial disclosures in divorce are made under oath. Deliberate concealment constitutes perjury, and in extreme cases, courts can refer the matter for criminal prosecution.

When to Hire a Forensic Accountant

Not every divorce requires forensic accounting. But the investment is justified when:

The cost of a forensic accountant — typically $15,000 to $50,000 or more depending on complexity — is weighed against the value of assets that may be recovered. In high-asset cases, the return on investment can be substantial.

The Bottom Line

Full financial disclosure is not optional in a Michigan divorce — it is a legal obligation. When one spouse does not meet that obligation, the tools exist to uncover what is hidden. Forensic accountants, discovery mechanisms, and the court's willingness to impose consequences make asset concealment a high-risk strategy.

If you suspect your spouse is hiding assets in an Oakland County or Southeast Michigan divorce, the time to engage a forensic accountant is early in the case — before the concealing spouse has time to further obscure the trail.

How common is asset hiding in divorce?
More common than most people expect. The National Endowment for Financial Education reports that roughly one in three people who share finances admit to financial deception — ranging from hidden accounts to understated income. In high-asset divorces, the incentive and the opportunity are both greater.
What are the red flags of hidden assets?
Sudden decreases in reported income, unexplained cash withdrawals, overpayment of taxes to recoup the refund after divorce, loans to family members or friends, deferred compensation or bonuses pushed to future periods, lifestyle that exceeds reported income, and newly discovered debts to closely held entities or related parties.
What does a forensic accountant do in a divorce case?
A forensic accountant reconstructs the complete financial picture through bank and brokerage analysis, tax return review, lifestyle analysis, business revenue tracing, and asset searches. They identify discrepancies, trace fund movements, and present findings in a report that can be used as evidence in court.
Can hiding assets change the outcome of my divorce?
Yes. Michigan courts take concealment seriously. A judge can impose sanctions, draw adverse inferences, award a disproportionate share of marital assets to the non-concealing spouse, or reopen a final judgment if hidden assets are discovered after the divorce is concluded under MCR 2.612.
What about cryptocurrency and digital assets?
Cryptocurrency is marital property subject to division. While it can be harder to trace than traditional financial assets, forensic specialists can follow blockchain transactions, identify wallet addresses through exchange records and subpoenas, and establish ownership through digital forensics. Courts increasingly understand digital assets and expect full disclosure.
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Suspect Hidden Assets in Your Michigan Divorce?

Jordan Dizik works with forensic accountants and financial investigators throughout Oakland County and Southeast Michigan to uncover concealed assets and ensure fair property division. Contact us for a confidential consultation.

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