Disclosure: Pallas Growth is a cash home buyer. The information in this article is intended to be educational and objective. We also provide the cash purchase services described here.
Florida's equitable distribution law (Florida Statute § 61.075) governs how marital property — including real estate — is divided in divorce. The full statute text is available at the Florida Legislature. For official family court resources and forms, see Florida Courts.
Divorce is one of life's most stressful transitions. When a house is involved — often the couple's largest asset — complexity multiplies. Questions arise immediately:
- How does Florida law divide the home?
- Who gets the house? Can both spouses force a sale?
- What happens to the mortgage, equity, and proceeds?
- What's the timeline? How long will this take?
- Are there faster or less-contentious ways to sell?
This guide answers all of it — in plain English, with a focus on practical next steps. Whether you're in early divorce discussions or actively selling, this resource is built to reduce confusion and conflict.
Deep Dives: Topic Cluster
The 9-Part Florida Divorce & Real Estate Series
Part 1: Florida Divorce Law & Your Home
Is Your Home a Marital Asset?
In Florida, the answer is usually yes. Florida is an "equitable distribution" state, meaning marital property (assets acquired during the marriage) is divided fairly — but not always 50/50.
Marital property includes:
- The family home (if purchased during marriage)
- Equity accumulated during marriage (even if one spouse bought before marriage)
- Mortgage debt (both spouses liable, regardless of who pays)
- Property improvements made during marriage
Separate Property vs. Marital Property
If one spouse owned the home before marriage and kept it in their name only, it may be considered separate property — but Florida courts also look at contributions. If the other spouse made mortgage payments or improvements, that equity becomes marital. The distinction matters because marital property must be divided, while separate property goes to the owner.
→ Full breakdown of the 9 statutory factors courts weigh: How Equitable Distribution Works in Florida Divorces.
Part 2: How the Home is Divided
Equitable Distribution: What It Really Means
"Equitable" means fair, not equal. A judge considers:
- Each spouse's contribution (financial and non-financial)
- Length of the marriage
- Each spouse's earning capacity and future needs
- Custody of children and standard of living
- Need for a homestead for minor children (major factor for custodial parents)
- Tax consequences of the distribution
- Willingness of each spouse to have custody of children
- Any other factor necessary to achieve a just and equitable distribution
Common Scenarios
Scenario 1: One Spouse Stays in the Home
Sarah and John bought a $400,000 home during their 15-year marriage. The mortgage balance is $250,000, leaving $150,000 in equity. They have two minor children.
The judge awards Sarah (primary custodian) the home because keeping the children in their family home is in their best interest. John receives $75,000 in other marital assets (retirement, investments) and Sarah receives the house, mortgage, and related liabilities.
Result: Sarah gets the home (valued $150K equity + $250K debt); John gets $75K in liquid assets. Not equal, but equitable.
Scenario 2: House is Sold, Proceeds Split
Maria and Carlos have a $500,000 home, mortgage of $300,000 (equity $200,000), and no minor children. They agree to sell.
Result: Home sells for $480,000 (slightly below appraisal). After realtor commission (~$28,800) and closing costs, net proceeds are ~$451,200. They pay off the $300,000 mortgage, leaving ~$151,200. They split this 50/50: $75,600 each.
Scenario 3: One Spouse Had the Home Before Marriage
David owned his home before marrying Lisa. It was worth $200,000 at marriage; now it's $300,000 (appreciation during the 10-year marriage). The mortgage was paid from marital income.
The court separates the property: $200,000 is separate (pre-marital); $100,000 appreciation is marital (earned during marriage). Lisa is entitled to a share of the $100,000 marital appreciation, not the original $200,000. She might receive $50,000 in other assets or David might refinance and pay her buyout.
→ The three ways divorcing couples handle a shared home (buyout, traditional sale, fast cash): Property Division in Divorce for Florida Homeowners.
Part 3: Timeline for Selling During Divorce
When Can You Sell?
Both spouses' names are on the title, so both must agree to sell (or a court orders it). You cannot force a sale without spouse consent unless the judge orders one during the divorce. However, once divorce is filed, the timeline for sale is negotiable in settlement discussions.
Traditional Sale Timeline (MLS Listing)
- Weeks 1–2: Prepare house, hire agent, list on MLS
- Weeks 3–6: Showings, inspections, appraisals
- Weeks 6–8: Negotiate repairs (buyers often request them)
- Weeks 8–10: Final walkthrough, close on sale (45–60 days total)
Fast Cash Sale Timeline (As-Is)
- Days 1–3: Get instant cash offer (no repairs needed)
- Days 4–7: Title review, preliminary walkthrough
- Days 7–14: Close on sale (no negotiation, no surprises)
→ Week-by-week breakdown plus why timelines stretch in divorce: How Long Does It Take to Sell a House in Florida During Divorce?
Part 4: Costs of Selling (Traditional vs. Fast)
| Expense | Traditional Sale (MLS) | Fast Cash Sale |
|---|---|---|
| Realtor Commission | 5–6% of sale price | $0 |
| Repairs | Varies; often $3K–$15K+ | $0 |
| Carrying Costs (mortgage, taxes, insurance) | $1K–$3K/month × 2 months = $2K–$6K | $100–$300 |
| Closing Costs | 1–2% of sale price | 1–2% of sale price |
Example: $400,000 home
- Traditional sale = ~$26,000–$32,000 in costs + carrying costs
- Fast cash sale = ~$4,000–$8,000 total
→ Line-by-line cost analysis and how to model your own numbers: Selling a House During Divorce in Florida: Timeline & Costs.
Part 5: Your Options for Selling
Option 1: Traditional MLS Listing
Pros:
- Potentially higher sale price
- Wide buyer pool
Cons:
- Longer timeline (45–60 days)
- Frequent showings and inspections
- Repair negotiations (disputes common in divorces)
- High costs (commission, repairs, carrying)
- Risk of deal falling through due to financing
Option 2: Fast Cash Sale (As-Is)
Pros:
- Close in 7–14 days
- No repairs or inspections
- Zero commission fees
- Certainty of close (no financing contingencies)
- Simplifies settlement (less room for disputes)
Cons:
- Lower sale price (usually 5–10% below market)
- Must vet buyer carefully
Option 3: Sell to Investor or Wholesaler
Similar to a cash sale; the buyer fixes the property and resells. Typically 15–25% below market value, but very fast and simple.
→ Side-by-side comparison with real-world scenarios: Traditional Sale vs. Cash Sale in a Florida Divorce. For the as-is route specifically: Selling a House As-Is During a Florida Divorce.
Part 6: Key Logistical Issues
What About HOA Fees?
If your property is in an HOA community, unpaid fees become a lien on the home. This must be paid at closing. Both spouses are liable, so it's a marital debt to be divided. Make sure your settlement accounts for outstanding HOA fees.
Liens, Judgments, and Tax Debt
If there's a judgment lien, tax lien, or mechanics lien on the property, it must be paid before sale. Your attorney or title company will flag these. In the divorce settlement, clarify who pays — usually from the selling spouse's proceeds.
Mortgage & Deed of Trust
Both spouses are on the mortgage (typically), meaning both are liable to the lender, regardless of who gets the house. If one spouse keeps the house, they usually refinance to remove the other spouse's name. Sale proceeds pay off the mortgage in full at closing.
→ Full guide to the title issues that derail closings — and how to spot them early: HOA Dues, Liens & Encumbrances When Selling During Divorce.
Part 7: Tax Implications
Capital Gains Exclusion
If you lived in the home as your primary residence for 2 of the last 5 years, you may exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 if married filing jointly) in capital gains. This typically shields you from tax on appreciation. Discuss with your tax advisor before closing.
Settlement Tax Considerations
If one spouse takes the home and the other takes cash or other assets, the court's equitable distribution is generally not taxable. However, if the buyout involves ongoing payments (alimony or support), tax treatment differs. Work with a CPA familiar with divorce.
→ The $500K vs $250K capital gains question is a core reason some couples sell before the decree is final. Deep dive: Should You Sell During or After Your Florida Divorce?
Part 8: Common Mistakes & How to Avoid Them
Mistake #1: Disagreement Over Timing
One spouse wants to sell immediately; the other wants to wait. This delays settlement and creates conflict.
Solution: Set a hard deadline in your divorce decree (e.g., "home must sell by December 31"). Avoid ambiguity.
Mistake #2: Fighting Over Repairs
Traditional sale invites inspection negotiation. Buyer finds issues; spouses disagree on who pays. Conflict explodes.
Solution: Sell as-is to a cash buyer. Zero repairs, zero negotiation. Faster closure = less conflict.
Mistake #3: Not Clearing Title
Surprise liens, unpaid HOA, or tax debt discovered at closing. Sale delays or falls through.
Solution: Get a title report early. Address liens in settlement. Clarify who pays and from where.
Mistake #4: Unclear Settlement Language
"The house shall be sold and proceeds split equally" — but who manages the sale? Timeline? Realtor choice? Ambiguity = disputes.
Solution: Spell it out in writing. Who lists it? Who handles negotiations? When must it close? Who pays for repairs?
→ Six mistakes with a full case study of how one couple lost $40K+ by skipping these steps: 6 Common Mistakes When Selling a Home During a Florida Divorce.
Part 9: When Both Spouses Don't Agree
Forced Sale (Partition)
If one spouse refuses to sign a sale, the other can ask the court for a "partition" order. The judge orders the home sold and proceeds split. This is rare in divorce (the settlement usually addresses it), but it exists as a backstop. Your attorney can explain costs and timeline for your situation.
Part 10: Action Steps & Next Moves
- Consult a Florida divorce attorney. They'll clarify your specific rights and obligations.
- Get a home appraisal or professional estimate. You need to know equity before negotiating.
- Review the title report. Identify liens, HOA balances, or other encumbrances early.
- Decide: traditional sale, fast cash sale, or other. Weigh timeline, costs, and certainty.
- Discuss with your spouse (or mediator). Align on timeline, process, and proceeds split.
- Document in your divorce decree. Clear language prevents post-divorce disputes.
- Execute the sale. Work with your agent or cash buyer to close smoothly.
Conclusion
Selling your home during a Florida divorce doesn't have to be painful. With clarity on the legal framework, an honest assessment of your situation, and the right sale strategy, you can liquidate this major asset, settle disputes, and move forward cleanly. Whether you choose traditional listing or a fast cash sale, the key is planning early and documenting decisions in writing. Your future self — and your wallet — will thank you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is my house considered marital property in a Florida divorce?
In most cases, yes. Florida is an equitable distribution state, so any home purchased during the marriage is marital property — even if only one spouse's name is on the deed. Equity accumulated during the marriage, mortgage debt, and property improvements made during the marriage are all subject to division.
Q: How long does it take to sell a house during a Florida divorce?
A traditional MLS listing typically takes 45–60 days from listing to close, including showings, inspections, and repair negotiations. A fast cash sale can close in 7–14 days with no repairs or financing contingencies. The right choice depends on your timeline, costs, and how much conflict you want to avoid.
Q: What are the costs of selling a home during divorce in Florida?
A traditional sale on a $400,000 home typically costs $26,000–$32,000 in realtor commission, repairs, and carrying costs. A fast cash sale on the same home usually costs $4,000–$8,000 total since there are no commissions, no repairs, and minimal carrying costs. Closing costs of 1–2% apply to both methods.
Q: Can one spouse force the sale of a home during a Florida divorce?
Both spouses must agree to sell if both names are on the title. However, if one spouse refuses, the other can ask the court for a partition order, which directs the home to be sold and proceeds split. This is rare because most divorce settlements address the home, but it exists as a legal backstop.
Ready to Sell Your Florida Home Fast?
If you're ready to sell your Florida home fast for cash, Pallas Growth is here to help. Get your free, no-obligation cash offer at pallasgrowth.com — we'll be in touch as soon as possible. Get My Cash Offer →