Michigan is an equitable distribution state, not a community property state. Under MCL 552.19, courts divide marital property fairly — which often approximates a 50/50 split but is not required to be equal. Separate property (assets owned before marriage, inheritances, and gifts) is generally not divided. The critical issues are identifying which property is marital, determining its value, and making the case for a fair allocation.
One of the most contested and financially significant aspects of any Michigan divorce is determining who gets what. The process involves two distinct questions: which property is subject to division, and how should it be divided. Getting both answers right can mean a difference of hundreds of thousands of dollars — particularly in Oakland County divorces involving real estate, retirement accounts, businesses, and investment portfolios.
Marital Property vs. Separate Property
Marital property is generally everything acquired by either spouse during the marriage, regardless of whose name is on the title. This includes the family home, bank accounts, retirement accounts accrued during the marriage, business interests developed during the marriage, vehicles, and investment accounts.
Separate property is generally not subject to division. It includes:
- Assets owned by either spouse before the marriage
- Inheritances received by one spouse, even during the marriage
- Gifts received by one spouse — whether from third parties or from the other spouse — as a gift is generally treated as separate property regardless of source
- Compensation for personal injuries (though the economic components of settlements can be treated differently)
One commonly litigated example: the engagement ring. In Michigan, an engagement ring is treated as a conditional gift — the condition being the marriage. Because the condition was fulfilled when the parties married, the ring belongs to the spouse who received it and is treated as that spouse's separate property.
Commingling is a common problem. Separate property can lose its protected status if it is mixed with marital assets — for example, depositing an inheritance into a joint checking account, using inherited funds to pay down a jointly-owned mortgage, or titling a premarital asset jointly. Once commingled, tracing the separate property's contribution can be difficult and expensive.
How Michigan Courts Divide Marital Property
After identifying what is marital property, the court divides it equitably under MCL 552.19. Factors courts consider include:
- Duration of the marriage
- Each spouse's contributions to acquiring and maintaining the marital estate — including homemaking and child-rearing
- Each spouse's earning capacity and financial needs after divorce
- Age and health of each spouse
- Fault and conduct during the marriage (dissipation of assets, financial misconduct)
- Prior standard of living
- Debts and liabilities of each party
In shorter marriages, courts tend toward restoring each party to their pre-marriage financial position. In long marriages, particularly those where one spouse did not work outside the home, courts lean more heavily toward equal division.
Key Assets and How They're Typically Handled
The marital home is usually the most emotionally significant asset. Options include one spouse buying out the other's equity and refinancing, a sale with proceeds divided, or — in cases involving minor children — a deferred sale until the children finish school.
Retirement accounts accumulated during the marriage are marital property. The pre-marital portion is typically separate. Division requires a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO), a court order directing the plan administrator to transfer the awarded portion without triggering early withdrawal penalties.
Business interests are among the most complex assets to divide. If a spouse owns a business or professional practice — a medical practice, law firm, or closely held company — the business must be valued, and a court must determine how much of that value is marital. Business valuation is often contested and requires expert witnesses.
Debt is divided alongside assets. Both spouses may be held responsible for joint debts regardless of what the divorce judgment says — creditors are not bound by divorce agreements. Structuring the settlement to account for debt responsibility is critical.
Frequently Asked Questions About Property Division in Michigan Divorce
Concerned About Property Division in Your Michigan Divorce?
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