Putting Together a Marital Settlement Agreement in a New York Divorce

In the heat of a New York divorce, it may feel nearly impossible to agree on many things. However, a marital settlement agreement can help you and your soon-to-be-ex resolve issues in the most peaceful way possible.

In short, this agreement is a contract between the two of you in which you come to terms on issues that surround a divorce. Think of a marital settlement agreement as a valuable tool that allows you and your spouse to decide how you want to split your marital property, rather than having the judge decide for you.

It also means that you are agreeing to an uncontested divorce, which is less costly both emotionally and financially than a contentious divorce.

Types of property that can be included in a marital settlement agreement

With the exception of gifts by third parties, inheritances and personal injury awards, marital property is anything acquired during a marriage, that fall under New York’s domestic relations law DRL 236 B.

If you have neither marital property nor joint assets, accounts or debts, then an agreement probably isn’t necessary.

If you bought a home, have a mortgage, purchased vehicles, have joint checking and/or savings accounts, have credit card bills or any other debts, or assets and investments that are marital property, then a marital settlement agreement is a good choice.

It can save you the stress and worry of not knowing what to expect when you go to court because you have the security of a mutually agreed-upon contract.

Property that is typically part of a marital settlement agreement includes: