No. 248 – Savvy divorce planning starts with seeing whole financial picture
Question
I am getting divorced. Everyone talks about the house, the pension and maintenance, but I do not even know where to begin. From a financial planning perspective, what should a woman be looking at before she signs anything?
Answer
Divorce is a major life event emotionally and financially. Before you sign anything, make sure you are strong enough to make good decisions. I have seen too many poor financial choices made by people who were simply exhausted. You do not need to feel perfect, but you do need enough emotional reserve to think clearly. Speaking to a counsellor if you feel you need some help.
Before you agree to a settlement, you need to know three things:
- what you are legally entitled to
- what the family finances actually look like
- what your life will cost the month after the divorce is final.
Start with what you are entitled to
The first question is not, “What do I want?” It is, “What am I legally entitled to?”
Divorce settlements should never be driven purely by emotion or by what feels fair in the moment. They need to be grounded in the legal structure of the marriage and backed by documents.
That begins with the matrimonial property system. Were you married in community of property, out of community of property with accrual, or out of community of property without accrual? Your divorce lawyer will help you understand what you are entitled to based on the way you were married.
Get a full picture of the finances
You need a proper picture of the estate: bank accounts, investment accounts, bond statements, vehicles, business interests, credit cards, personal loans, tax returns, and any suretyships.
Do not just ask what assets exist. Ask what debts exist too. Many people only realise too late that they were fighting for half an estate without understanding the liabilities attached to it.
Three areas deserve special attention:
The family home
Many people want to keep the family home because it feels like security and offers continuity. I understand that. But a house can be an emotional win and a financial trap.
The real question is not whether you want the house. It is whether you can afford it on your post-divorce income. Can you cover the bond, rates, levies, insurance, maintenance and repairs without constant pressure? Can you buy out your spouse without draining your cash reserves? Are you keeping an asset you can live in, but not live off?
This matters more than most people realise. A settlement can look generous on paper and still leave you exposed. R3 million tied up in a costly property is not the same as R3 million in a diversified, tax-efficient investment portfolio with liquidity.
Retirement funds
Retirement funds are often one of the largest assets in a divorce, yet they are frequently misunderstood.
South African law allows a spouse to share in the other spouse’s pension interest on divorce. Do not treat it as some vague future issue. You need to know what funds exist, what the pension interest is worth, how the divorce order is worded, and what options apply when the benefit is paid or transferred.
It is best to get your share of these funds transferred across to you to invest in a preservation fund in your name. This is the most tax efficient solution and will give you full control of that investment.
Maintenance
Maintenance is another place where people make bad decisions because they are angry, tired, or desperate for the process to end.
Child maintenance is based on the child’s reasonable needs and the parents’ respective means. In practice, that means you need a proper budget. Not a rough estimate. Courts and negotiators can work with numbers and documents. If you do not know how to prepare a budget, send me an email and I will gladly forward a budget template to you.
Build a plan for life after the divorce
What will your monthly budget look like once the legal process is over? What income is guaranteed? What expenses are non-negotiable? How much emergency cash will you need? What happens to your medical aid, risk cover, will, beneficiary nominations and retirement planning?
Too many women leave a divorce with a capital amount but no real plan for protecting it. A lump sum is not the same as financial security. Without a strategy, money gets eaten up by fear, poor decisions, lifestyle drift and family pressure.
That is why it helps to speak to a financial planner who can help structure your cash flow, protect maintenance where necessary, and invest any retirement benefits or lump sums properly.
Do not approach divorce as a fight over things. Approach it as the design of your next financial chapter. Slow the process down enough to understand the numbers, the legal regime, the tax consequences and the long-term cash flow. What you sign now may shape the next decade of your life.
KENNY MEIRING IS AN INDEPENDENT FINANCIAL ADVISER
Contact him via phone, email or via contact phone on the financialwellnesscoach.co.za website
Read more of our articles on the Daily Maverick website or newspaper weekly!