High-Net-Worth Divorce in Florida: A Complete Guide
Divorce involving substantial assets is rarely just about money. It involves businesses, real estate, investment portfolios, equity compensation, retirement accounts, international holdings, and often, decades of intertwined financial decisions. Under Florida law, dividing those assets requires a careful, deliberate approach — one that balances legal precision with the practical realities of preserving wealth.
This guide explains how Florida treats high-net-worth divorces, the asset categories that typically appear in these cases, the valuation and disclosure processes involved, and the tax, alimony, and privacy considerations that often shape outcomes. It is intended for informational purposes and is not a substitute for case-specific legal advice.
What Qualifies as a High-Net-Worth Divorce?
Florida law does not define “high-net-worth” divorce. In practice, the term refers to cases where the marital estate is large enough — or complex enough — that ordinary divorce procedures are insufficient. There is no specific threshold; rather, high-net-worth cases tend to share certain features:
- One or both spouses own significant business interests, professional practices, or partnership stakes.
- The marital estate includes multiple properties, including out-of-state or international real estate.
- Income includes equity compensation such as stock options, restricted stock units (RSUs), or carried interest.
- Retirement accounts, pensions, deferred compensation, or executive benefit plans require specialized division.
- Trusts, inheritances, or family wealth structures are involved.
- One or both parties are public figures whose privacy is a central concern.
The complexity, more than the dollar amount, distinguishes these cases. A couple with $5 million in straightforward assets may have a simpler divorce than a couple with $1.5 million tied up in a closely held business and a non-vested equity grant.
Florida’s Equitable Distribution Framework
Florida is an equitable distribution state. Under Fla. Stat. § 61.075, courts begin with the presumption that marital assets and debts should be divided equally between the spouses. The court may then consider statutory factors that justify an unequal distribution, including:
- Each spouse’s contribution to the marriage, including contributions to the care and education of the children and services as a homemaker.
- The economic circumstances of each spouse.
- The duration of the marriage.
- Any interruption of personal careers or educational opportunities.
- Each spouse’s contribution to the acquisition, enhancement, and production of income, or to the depreciation of marital and non-marital assets.
- Intentional dissipation, waste, depletion, or destruction of marital assets within the past two years.
Marital vs. Non-Marital Property
Only marital property is subject to equitable distribution. In general, marital property includes assets acquired during the marriage and the appreciation of non-marital assets where that appreciation results from marital labor or marital funds. Non-marital property typically includes assets owned before the marriage, gifts and inheritances received by one spouse individually, and assets specified as non-marital in a valid prenuptial agreement.
In high-net-worth cases, the line between marital and non-marital property is often the most contested issue. Commingled funds, jointly titled assets, and active appreciation of pre-marital business interests can convert what began as separate property into a marital asset, in whole or in part.
Key Asset Categories in High-Net-Worth Divorce
Closely Held Businesses and Professional Practices
A privately held business is often the most valuable — and most contested — asset in a high-net-worth divorce. Issues include valuation methodology, the treatment of personal goodwill versus enterprise goodwill, minority discounts, control premiums, and the impact of the divorce on operations. Florida courts have addressed these issues at length, and outcomes depend heavily on facts and expert testimony.
Real Estate
Marital homes, investment properties, vacation homes, and out-of-state or international real estate each present their own questions. Florida courts have jurisdiction over Florida property; out-of-state property often requires coordinated handling, including consideration of homestead protections, mortgage liability, and capital gains exposure.
Investment Portfolios and Retirement Accounts
Brokerage accounts, IRAs, 401(k)s, pensions, and deferred compensation arrangements each have their own division mechanics. Some accounts can be divided directly; others require a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) or comparable instrument. Tax basis, holding periods, and embedded gains influence what an “equal” division actually delivers.
Equity Compensation: Stock Options, RSUs, and Carried Interest
Stock options and RSUs granted during the marriage are typically marital property to the extent earned during the marriage, even if they vest after the date of filing. Florida courts often apply a coverture fraction or analogous formula to allocate the marital portion. For carried interest in private equity or venture funds, allocation depends on grant terms, vesting schedules, and whether the interest is compensation for past or future services.
Trusts and Inherited Wealth
Inherited assets and assets held in trust are generally non-marital, but the analysis is fact-specific. Distributions received during the marriage and used for marital purposes, or trusts where the beneficiary spouse exerts control, may be subject to claims. Self-settled trusts and asset protection structures created during the marriage receive particular scrutiny.
International Assets
Cross-border holdings — foreign accounts, foreign real estate, ownership in foreign entities — raise jurisdictional, disclosure, tax (including FBAR and FATCA reporting), and enforcement issues. International divorces frequently require coordinated counsel in multiple jurisdictions.
Business Valuation in Florida Divorce
Valuing a closely held business typically requires a forensic accountant or accredited business appraiser. Three main approaches are used, often in combination:
- Income approach: Values the business based on the present value of expected future earnings, often using discounted cash flow analysis.
- Market approach: Compares the business to recent sales of comparable companies.
- Asset approach: Values the business based on the fair value of its underlying net assets.
The valuation date matters: Florida courts may use the date of filing, the date of separation, or the date of trial, depending on circumstances. Expert disagreements on methodology, normalization adjustments to earnings, and discount rates often drive differences in valuation conclusions.
Hidden Assets and Forensic Accounting
Under Florida Family Law Rule of Procedure 12.285, both spouses must produce extensive financial disclosures, including a financial affidavit, three years of tax returns, bank and brokerage statements, loan applications, and other records. Where a spouse may be concealing assets, additional tools include:
- Forensic accounting analysis of cash flows, lifestyle expenditures, and unexplained deposits or withdrawals.
- Subpoenas to financial institutions, employers, and business partners.
- Depositions and document requests under the rules of civil procedure.
- Review of business records, including general ledgers, payroll, and intercompany transactions.
Courts can impose significant consequences for non-disclosure, including unequal distribution in favor of the disadvantaged spouse, attorney’s fees awards, and reopening of judgments where fraud is established.
Tax Implications
Tax considerations often determine whether a particular settlement is genuinely equal in economic terms. Key issues include:
- Tax basis and embedded gains: Two assets of equal market value may have very different after-tax values depending on their tax basis.
- Capital gains exposure: Assets transferred between spouses incident to divorce are generally non-recognition events under IRC § 1041, but the recipient takes carryover basis.
- Alimony tax treatment: Alimony orders entered after December 31, 2018, are not deductible by the payor or includible in income for the recipient.
- Retirement account treatment: QDRO transfers from qualified plans avoid early withdrawal penalties; transfers from IRAs require careful structuring.
- State tax considerations: Florida has no state income tax, but spouses with multi-state ties may face exposure elsewhere.
Alimony in High-Net-Worth Cases
Florida’s alimony statute (Fla. Stat. § 61.08) requires the court to first determine whether a spouse has an actual need for support and whether the other spouse has the ability to pay. The court then considers a list of factors, including the standard of living during the marriage, the duration of the marriage, the age and physical and emotional condition of each party, the financial resources of each party, and contributions to the marriage.
In high-net-worth cases, “need” is often analyzed through the lens of the marital lifestyle. Lifestyle analyses examine actual spending patterns to establish a reasonable post-divorce baseline. Earning capacity analyses may be relevant where one spouse left the workforce or worked in a substantially diminished role during the marriage. Recent legislative changes have eliminated permanent alimony for new cases, replacing it with bridge-the-gap, rehabilitative, or durational alimony.
Premarital and Postnuptial Agreements
Florida recognizes premarital agreements under the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act, Fla. Stat. § 61.079. To be enforceable, an agreement must be in writing, signed by both parties, and entered into voluntarily. Fair financial disclosure and the absence of unconscionability are key inquiries on enforcement.
Postnuptial agreements, while not codified, are enforceable under general contract principles, with similar scrutiny applied to disclosure and fairness. In high-net-worth divorces, the existence and enforceability of a prenup or postnup often determines what assets are even in dispute. Challenges to such agreements are common and require detailed factual development.
Privacy and Discretion
Florida’s public records framework (Florida Constitution Art. I § 24) makes most court records open to the public. Limited mechanisms exist to seal portions of family law files, but full sealing is uncommon. Practical privacy strategies include:
- Resolving cases through negotiated settlement rather than contested litigation, which limits public filings.
- Using confidentiality clauses in marital settlement agreements covering disclosures, communications, and post-divorce conduct.
- Drafting pleadings narrowly to avoid unnecessary personal disclosures.
- Considering collaborative law processes, which keep negotiation outside the public courtroom.
- Coordinating with public-relations and crisis-communications counsel where the case may attract media attention.
Common Pitfalls
A few recurring issues tend to drive avoidable cost and conflict in high-net-worth divorces:
- Underestimating discovery scope. Complex marital estates require extensive document production. Cutting corners here invites later challenges.
- Treating “equal” as “equitable.” An equal split of pre-tax assets may produce unequal after-tax outcomes.
- Ignoring liquidity. A settlement that allocates illiquid business interests to one spouse and cash to the other can leave both sides ill-equipped for post-divorce life.
- Overlooking estate planning effects. Divorce alters revocable trusts, beneficiary designations, and estate plans; failing to update these after divorce can produce unintended consequences.
- Premature public statements. Social media activity, press statements, and even casual conversations during a pending divorce can become evidence.
Frequently Asked Questions
What qualifies as a high-net-worth divorce in Florida?
There is no statutory definition. In practice, high-net-worth divorce refers to cases involving substantial marital estates — often complex assets such as closely held businesses, significant investment portfolios, multiple properties, equity compensation, or international holdings. The complexity, not just the dollar value, is what distinguishes these cases.
How does Florida divide assets in a divorce?
Florida follows equitable distribution under Florida Statute § 61.075. The court begins with a presumption of equal division of marital assets and debts, then considers factors that may justify an unequal split. Non-marital property — generally property acquired before the marriage, by gift, or by inheritance — is not subject to division.
How is a business valued in a Florida divorce?
Business valuation typically requires a forensic accountant or certified business appraiser. Common approaches include the income approach (based on projected earnings), the market approach (comparable sales), and the asset approach (net asset value). The choice of method depends on the type of business, its industry, and available financial data.
Can hidden assets be discovered in a divorce?
Yes. Forensic accountants, formal discovery, subpoenas, lifestyle analyses, and review of tax returns and financial records can uncover undisclosed assets. Florida law requires both spouses to disclose all financial information through mandatory financial affidavits. Failure to disclose can result in court sanctions and reopening of the asset division.
Are stock options and RSUs divided in divorce?
Stock options and restricted stock units (RSUs) granted during the marriage are typically considered marital property to the extent they were earned during the marriage, even if they vest later. Florida courts often use a coverture fraction or other formula to determine the marital portion, depending on whether the grant was for past services or future performance.
How is alimony determined in high-asset cases?
Florida law (Fla. Stat. § 61.08) requires the court to first determine the actual need of the requesting spouse and the ability to pay of the other. The court then considers statutory factors including the standard of living during the marriage, the duration of the marriage, the age and health of each party, the financial resources of each party, and contributions to the marriage. In high-net-worth cases, lifestyle and earning capacity analyses are typical.
Can divorce records be kept private in Florida?
Florida court records are generally public. Limited mechanisms exist to seal portions of a file in narrow circumstances, but full sealing is rare. Practical privacy strategies include negotiated settlements rather than litigated proceedings, confidentiality clauses in marital settlement agreements, and careful drafting of pleadings to minimize personal disclosures.
Considering a Complex Divorce in Florida?
Pazos Law Group represents clients in high-asset and complex divorce matters in Miami-Dade and surrounding counties.
Schedule a Confidential ConsultationThe information on this page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading or sharing this content does not create an attorney-client relationship with Pazos Law Group. Florida law and the application of statutes change over time; please consult a licensed Florida attorney about your specific situation. Statutory citations and procedural references are current as of the date noted above.