Property Settlements

Understanding Property Settlement | Interact Support
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Understanding your property settlement — one step at a time

Separation is one of life’s hardest experiences. This guide helps you understand how property is divided under Australian law, what you need to disclose, and how to prepare for a fair outcome.

Important: This guide provides general information about family property law in Australia. It is not legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Property settlement is one of the most significant financial decisions you will ever make — we strongly encourage you to seek independent legal advice, financial advice, and other professional guidance before making any decisions.

What is property settlement?

When a relationship ends — whether married or de facto — everything you and your partner own (and owe) needs to be sorted out. Property settlement is the legal process of dividing your financial lives. It’s not automatic, and doing nothing has real risks.

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It’s not automatic

Property doesn’t divide itself. You need to either reach an agreement — ideally through Family Dispute Resolution — or go to court. Doing nothing has real legal risks, including strict time limits.

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Time limits apply

Married couples have 12 months from the date of divorce to apply to court. De facto couples have 2 years from separation. Missing these deadlines risks additional costs or even closing the door to a fair settlement.

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Agreement is possible

Most property matters are resolved without going to court. Family Dispute Resolution (FDR) with a trained practitioner is a respectful, cost-effective way to reach an agreement that works for both of you.

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Full disclosure is the law

Both parties must honestly disclose all assets, liabilities, income and financial resources — including assets held overseas. Since 10 June 2025, this is a statutory duty under s71B of the Family Law Act. Hiding assets has serious consequences.

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Overseas assets count too

If you or your partner were born overseas, or hold assets in another country — property, super equivalents, businesses, bank accounts — these must be disclosed and can be included in the Australian property pool.

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Companion animals

Since June 2025, pets are no longer treated as ordinary property. Courts now consider who primarily cared for the animal, its attachment to children, and any family violence history. Courts can order who keeps the pet — but not shared custody arrangements.

The four-step framework

Australian family law uses a structured four-step process to work out a fair division of property. Now codified in the Family Law Act 1975 (s79(3)) following the 2024 amendments, this is how a court would approach your matter — and a great guide for your own negotiations.

1

Identify the property pool s79 married  ·  s90SM de facto

Everything goes on the table — all assets, debts and financial resources of both parties, whether held in your name, jointly, overseas, or through companies and trusts. This includes both legal interests (what’s in your name) and equitable interests (your real financial stake, even if you’re not named on the title).

  • Real estate, superannuation, savings, shares, businesses, vehicles
  • Assets held in trusts, companies, and overseas
  • All debts and liabilities of both parties
  • Assets in one name that the other party contributed to
Legal vs. equitable: Legal ownership is whose name is on the document. Equitable ownership recognises your real stake — even without your name. If you contributed financially or through work on the home, you may have an equitable interest the court will recognise.
2

Assess contributions s79(4) married  ·  s90SM(4) de facto

The court considers everything each person has contributed throughout the relationship — not just money earned. Contributions are assessed across four broad categories:

Direct financial contributions — money or assets brought into or generated during the relationship:

  • Income earned and deposited into joint or personal accounts
  • Property, savings or investments owned before the relationship began
  • Inheritances and gifts received — even if received in your name alone
  • Insurance payouts (e.g. personal injury, life insurance proceeds)
  • Gambling or lottery winnings received during the relationship
  • Compensation payments, redundancy payouts, or legal settlements
  • Money contributed by family members (e.g. parents helping with a deposit)

Indirect financial contributions — enabling the other party to accumulate assets or reducing household costs:

  • Paying rent or living expenses that freed the other party to save or invest
  • Managing household finances, budgeting, or reducing debt
  • Supporting a partner’s career, study, or business through your income
  • Providing unpaid labour in a family business

Non-financial contributions — work that built or maintained the asset pool:

  • Renovating, building, or improving real estate
  • Maintaining vehicles, equipment, or investment properties
  • Managing the administration of investments, tax, or trusts

Homemaker and parenting contributions — equal in the eyes of the law:

  • Primary care of children, including during a partner’s career or business growth
  • Running the household — cooking, cleaning, organising, emotional labour
  • Caring for an ill, elderly, or disabled family member
  • Family violence (s79(4)(ca)): if violence made it harder for you to contribute in any of these ways, this is now an express statutory consideration
Duration matters: The length of the relationship affects how contributions are weighed. In short relationships, the court tends to look more closely at what each party brought in at the start — restoring each person closer to where they began. In long relationships, contributions tend to be viewed more broadly and pooled together, with less emphasis on who contributed what specific amount. There is no fixed rule, but generally the longer the relationship, the more the contributions are treated as a shared endeavour.
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Current & future circumstances s79(5) married  ·  s90SM(5) de facto

Once contributions have been assessed, the court looks forward — at the real financial circumstances each person will face after separation. This step can significantly adjust the outcome, particularly where there is an imbalance in earning capacity, health, or caring responsibilities.

Family violence — listed first in the Act (s79(5)(a))

  • The economic effect of family violence on the other party’s current and future circumstances must be considered first
  • This includes reduced earning capacity, health impacts, loss of superannuation, ongoing fear, and costs of re-establishing independence
  • Economic and financial abuse — such as coerced debt, sabotaged employment, or controlled access to money — is expressly included

Age, health and earning capacity (s79(5)(b) & (c))

  • The age and state of health of each party — including physical and mental health conditions affecting the ability to work
  • Each party’s income, property, financial resources, and realistic capacity for paid employment
  • Time spent out of the workforce during the relationship and the impact on career progression, qualifications, or income
  • Retraining needs and the cost and time involved in returning to work

Children — care, housing and support (s79(5)(f), (g), (p) & (s))

  • The extent to which either party has care of children under 18 — and the need to provide appropriate housing for those children
  • The impact of the primary caring role on earning capacity now and into the future
  • The need to protect a party’s ability to continue in their role as a parent
  • Child support obligations — amounts payable or receivable under the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989

Financial resources and liabilities (s79(5)(d), (e) & (h))

  • Intentional or reckless wastage of assets after separation — gambling, reckless spending, or transferring assets to third parties
  • Debts and liabilities of each party, including how they arose and who benefited
  • Responsibilities to support other dependants — elderly parents, children from other relationships

Superannuation, pensions and government benefits (s79(5)(i), (j) & (s))

  • Eligibility for superannuation, pensions, or government benefits — including Centrelink payments, aged pension, and overseas pensions
  • The rate at which any pension or allowance is currently being paid
  • The long-term impact of superannuation splitting on retirement security for each party

Standard of living and other factors (s79(5)(k), (l) & (v))

  • A reasonable standard of living for each party following separation
  • Whether a property adjustment would enable a party to pursue education, establish a business, or gain an adequate income
  • Whether either party is cohabiting with a new partner and the financial impact of that arrangement
  • Any other fact or circumstance the justice of the case requires — this is a broad catch-all that allows courts to consider unique or unusual situations
Often overlooked: If you are the primary carer of children, the law expressly requires the court to consider your need to provide stable housing for those children — this is not simply a practical matter, it is a named legal factor. Similarly, if your health, career, or earning capacity has been affected by the relationship or its breakdown, these are real and legitimate considerations that should be raised in your FDR discussions.
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Just and equitable The overall test

Having considered the pool, contributions and future needs, the final question is: is the proposed outcome just and equitable — fair to both people in all the circumstances?

There is no formula. There is no automatic 50/50 split. Every relationship is different, and outcomes reflect the unique circumstances of each family. This is why skilled, independent advice — and a good FDR practitioner — makes such a difference.

An agreement through FDR can be made legally binding through Consent Orders (approved by the court) or a Binding Financial Agreement. Getting legal advice before finalising any agreement is essential.

Understanding the property pool

The property pool is broader than most people expect. It includes everything both parties own and owe — and both have a legal duty to disclose it all, honestly and completely.

🏷️ What goes IN the pool

  • The family home (even if in one name only)
  • Investment and rental properties
  • Superannuation — both parties’
  • Bank accounts, savings, term deposits
  • Shares, managed funds, ETFs
  • Cryptocurrency and digital assets
  • Businesses and company interests
  • Vehicles, boats, caravans
  • Household contents and valuables
  • Assets held in family trusts
  • Overseas assets — property, accounts, super equivalents
  • Life insurance surrender values
  • Money owed to you (loans to others)

📉 Liabilities that reduce the pool

  • Mortgages and home loans
  • Investment property loans
  • Personal loans and car finance
  • Credit card balances (all cards)
  • ATO tax debts
  • Business liabilities
  • HECS/HELP student debt
  • Loans from family or friends
  • Overseas debts and liabilities
Joint debts warning: A bank can still pursue both parties for a joint loan regardless of what your property agreement says. Any settlement must include a plan for refinancing joint debts.

📌 The duty of disclosure — now in the Act

Since 10 June 2025, the duty of disclosure sits in the Family Law Act 1975 itself (s71B). Both parties must disclose all assets, liabilities, income and financial resources — whether held solely, jointly, or through a company, trust or other entity, in Australia or overseas. Disclosure is ongoing. Courts can draw adverse inferences, award costs, and set aside agreements where disclosure was incomplete.

Overseas assets — what you need to know

Many Australians were born overseas or have family connections abroad. Whether it’s a property in another country, a foreign bank account, a superannuation equivalent, or an inheritance — overseas assets are part of your property pool and must be disclosed under Australian family law.

🌏 Australian law has a long reach

The Australian Family Court can make orders about assets located overseas — and regularly does. Simply holding assets in another country does not place them beyond the reach of Australian property settlement law. Non-disclosure of overseas assets is treated very seriously by the courts.

If you or your partner were born overseas, came to Australia on a visa, or have maintained financial connections to your home country, the following types of assets are commonly relevant and must be considered.

🏠 Overseas property

Real estate owned in another country — whether inherited, purchased before or during the relationship. Must be valued (usually in AUD at current exchange rates) and included in the pool.

🏦 Foreign bank accounts

Bank accounts held in another country, including accounts used to receive overseas income, remittances, or savings maintained in your country of origin.

🧓 Superannuation equivalents

Many countries have their own retirement savings systems — pension funds in the UK (SIPP), NZ KiwiSaver, US 401(k), Indian EPF, and others. These are treated similarly to Australian superannuation.

🏢 Overseas businesses

A business, company shares, or investment interest held in another country — whether operated actively or held passively. Valuation may require local expertise.

🎁 Inheritances & family gifts

Money or property received as inheritance or significant gift from overseas family members. The timing and nature of the receipt matters to how it is treated in settlement.

📈 Foreign shares & investments

Shares, managed funds, or investment accounts held with overseas brokers or financial institutions — including shares held in an overseas employer (e.g. through stock option plans).

📅 Important — valuation date: All assets, including overseas assets, are valued at their current market value at the time of reaching agreement — not at the date of separation. This is particularly important for overseas assets where exchange rates, property markets, and investment values may have moved significantly since you separated. Make sure any valuations and currency conversions reflect the current position, and that both parties agree on a consistent valuation date. Seek advice if values have changed significantly since separation.

💱 Valuing overseas assets

  • Assets are valued at their current value at the time of reaching agreement — not the date of separation
  • Convert values to Australian dollars using the exchange rate at the date the agreement is reached — use RBA rates or a recognised currency service
  • For overseas property, a local licensed valuer may be needed to provide a current market value
  • For overseas businesses, use a specialist business valuer familiar with the local market
  • Keep clear records of the valuation date, the exchange rate used, and the source of both

⚠️ Special challenges

  • Enforcement: Australian court orders for overseas assets may be difficult to enforce — local legal advice in that country may be needed
  • Tax: Foreign tax obligations (capital gains, inheritance tax, withholding tax) may apply in addition to Australian tax
  • Currency fluctuation: Overseas asset values change with exchange rates — the timing of transfers matters
  • Different legal systems: Property law varies significantly between countries — what counts as jointly owned may differ

💡 Our experience with multicultural families: Interact Support works with clients from many different backgrounds and cultural contexts. We understand that conversations about overseas assets, family obligations, and cross-cultural financial arrangements require sensitivity and care. If you have concerns about disclosing overseas assets, or aren’t sure what needs to be included, speaking with a family lawyer experienced in international property matters is an important first step.

Property Pool Asset Guide

Our interactive asset tool walks you through every asset type on the court’s financial statement — from the family home and superannuation to cryptocurrency, overseas assets, and companion animals. For each asset it shows you what information you’ll need, how to determine its value, and what tax considerations apply.

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Real Estate

Home & investment property

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Superannuation

All funds & SMSF

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Shares & Crypto

Investments & digital assets

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Business Interests

Companies, trusts & sole traders

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Overseas Assets

Property, pensions & accounts

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Debts & Liabilities

Loans, cards & tax debts

Plus: vehicles, household contents, life insurance, and more — with a printable preparation checklist.

Open the Asset Tool

Who can help you?

Property settlement touches legal, financial, tax, child support, and sometimes social dimensions. The right professionals make a real difference — and the cost of good advice is far less than the cost of getting it wrong.

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Family Lawyer

Essential for understanding your legal rights and obligations and the strength of your position, and for formalising any agreement into Consent Orders or a Binding Financial Agreement.

Find a family lawyer →
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FDR with Interact Support

Our trained Family Dispute Resolution practitioners guide respectful, structured negotiations — outside of court, at a fraction of litigation costs. We help you reach an agreement that works for your whole family.

Book with Interact Support →
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Financial Adviser

A financial adviser can model settlement scenarios, advise on superannuation splitting, and help you understand the long-term financial impact of different outcomes.

Find a financial adviser →
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Accountant / Tax Adviser

Capital gains tax, business valuations, trust structures, tax debts, and overseas tax obligations all need specialist attention. An accountant helps you understand the true after-tax value of what’s on offer.

Find a tax adviser →
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Child Support Services

Services Australia administers child support. Understanding your obligations and entitlements is an important part of your overall financial picture after separation.

Services Australia →
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Housing & Social Services

If you’re concerned about housing security, income support, or family safety, help is available now — you don’t have to wait for property settlement to access support.

Services Australia →

Ready to take the next step?

Interact Support’s trained FDR practitioners can guide you through property discussions in a safe, structured environment — helping you reach an agreement that works for your whole family.

Interact Support Incorporated | interact.support

This page provides general information about property settlement under Australian family law. It is not legal advice.
Please seek independent professional advice for your specific circumstances.

Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) as amended by the Family Law Amendment Act 2024. Information current as at March 2026.

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