[{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"Article","@id":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/what-assets-go-into-the-pot-in-a-divorce-settlement-and-how-to-argue-they-shouldnt\/#Article","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/what-assets-go-into-the-pot-in-a-divorce-settlement-and-how-to-argue-they-shouldnt\/","headline":"What Assets Go Into the Pot in a Divorce Settlement \u2014 And How to Argue They Shouldn\u2019t","name":"What Assets Go Into the Pot in a Divorce Settlement \u2014 And How to Argue They Shouldn\u2019t","description":"Introduction Dividing finances at divorce can feel overwhelming. English courts do not apply a rigid formula. Instead they follow statutory principles and case law to reach a fair financial remedy. This guide explains what assets commonly go into the matrimonial \u201cpot\u201d, the legal tests the court applies, and practical steps to argue that specific assets [...]","datePublished":"2025-10-29","dateModified":"2026-01-26","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/author\/peter-ajlo\/#Person","name":"Peter AJLO","url":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/author\/peter-ajlo\/","identifier":19,"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/wp-content\/litespeed\/avatar\/4e9ed8756d384157eb826e4bc67ffb46.jpg?ver=1777327258","url":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/wp-content\/litespeed\/avatar\/4e9ed8756d384157eb826e4bc67ffb46.jpg?ver=1777327258","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"AlexanderJLO London Law","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/03\/ajlo-logo.png","url":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/03\/ajlo-logo.png","width":460,"height":275}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/shutterstock_1414714421.jpeg","url":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/10\/shutterstock_1414714421.jpeg","height":662,"width":1000},"url":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/what-assets-go-into-the-pot-in-a-divorce-settlement-and-how-to-argue-they-shouldnt\/","about":["Finances on divorce"],"wordCount":2666,"keywords":["Form E"],"articleBody":"IntroductionDividing finances at divorce can feel overwhelming. English courts do not apply a rigid formula. Instead they follow statutory principles and case law to reach a fair financial remedy. This guide explains what assets commonly go into the matrimonial \u201cpot\u201d, the legal tests the court applies, and practical steps to argue that specific assets should be excluded or treated differently. Read on for clear headings, tactics you can use with your lawyer or mediator, and common pitfalls to avoid.How the Court Approaches Financial RemediesStatutory frameworkWhen deciding financial settlements the court applies section 25 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. Section 25 lists the factors the court must consider, including the welfare of any children, each party\u2019s financial needs and resources, the standard of living during the marriage, contributions made, and the conduct of the parties if that conduct is relevant. The court seeks a fair outcome that meets needs and reflects justice between the parties.Key judicial principlesJudges work within the framework developed by cases such as White v White and Miller v Miller; McFarlane. White v White established the principle of equality of treatment between spouses and warned against a discrimination in favour of the breadwinner. Miller clarified that courts begin from equality but adjust for needs, compensation, and conduct. These principles shape whether an asset is shared, excluded, or attracts a compensatory award.What \u201cthe pot\u201d commonly containsOverview of matrimonial assetsThe court considers all assets and resources available to the parties when making a financial remedy order. Typical items include:&#8211; The family home and other properties&#8211; Savings and bank accounts&#8211; Investments, stocks, shares and ISAs&#8211; Business interests and shares in companies&#8211; Pensions and pension-sharing rights&#8211; Personal possessions with financial value, such as vehicles and jewellery&#8211; Debts and liabilities&#8211; Trust interests and entitlements&#8211; Inheritances and gifts, subject to their character and timingThe court puts these items into an overall picture of the family\u2019s wealth and then determines how to meet needs and divide resources.Pensions are part of the potPensions often represent the largest single asset for one or both parties. The court can order pension sharing, earmarking, or offsetting. Judges consider the value of pensions when achieving a fair outcome and when making clean break orders.Business assets and the potCourts include business assets unless there is a compelling reason not to. The aim is to achieve fairness without unnecessarily destroying a business. Typical options include valuing the business, transferring assets to the other party, or setting up deferred payment arrangements.Which assets may be excluded or treated differentlyNon-matrimonial assetsThe term \u201cnon-matrimonial assets\u201d commonly describes assets the court may treat as separate from the matrimonial pot. Examples include:&#8211; Assets acquired before the marriage and preserved as separate property&#8211; Substantial inheritances kept apart from family finances&#8211; Gifts from third parties intended for one spouse only&#8211; Damages awards for personal injury where the award compensates future earnings or care needsThe court looks at the nature of the asset, the timing of acquisition, whether the parties treated it as joint or separate, and the needs of both spouses and children.Gifts and inheritancesCourts often scrutinise receipts of gifts or inheritances. If one spouse received a gift or inheritance and the parties used it for the benefit of the family or commingled it with joint assets the court may treat it as matrimonial. If the recipient preserved the asset in separate form with clear steps to maintain separation the court may exclude it or make a compensatory adjustment.Trust interests and third party ownershipAssets held in trusts or registered in a third party\u2019s name can complicate the picture. The court will investigate the real beneficial ownership. If the asset truly belongs to a third party the court cannot transfer legal title from that person. However, where a party holds a beneficial interest or where the third party holds assets on trust for the family the court can consider those interests.How courts decide whether an asset should be includedTiming and nexus to the marriageTiming matters. Assets acquired after separation usually fall outside the matrimonial pot, subject to exceptions. The court assesses whether an asset has a sufficient nexus to the marriage \u2014 for example, a business founded during the marriage will usually count as matrimonial even if the legal title sits with one spouse.Conduct and reason for acquisitionThe court may consider why the asset exists. Gifts intended for the family tend to be treated as matrimonial. Gifts intended for one spouse only may remain separate if the donor\u2019s intention and the parties\u2019 behaviour show preservation of that separation.Commingling and treatment by the partiesIf parties commingle funds \u2014 for instance by transferring inherited funds into a joint account or using them to pay joint mortgage instalments \u2014 the court often regards those funds as matrimonial. Conversely, keeping separate accounts and documenting the origin of funds strengthens an argument for exclusion.Evidence and disclosure that support exclusionFull, accurate disclosureThe court requires full financial disclosure through Form E. A clear, truthful Form E builds credibility. If you claim an asset should be excluded prepare evidence that shows the asset\u2019s history, source of funds and the parties\u2019 treatment.Documentary evidenceCollect bank statements, transfer documents, trust deeds, wills, letters from donors, valuations and business records. Prepare a chronology showing when a gift or inheritance arrived, how you used it, and the steps you took to keep it separate. A well-ordered bundle helps persuade the judge.Third party testimony and expert reportsObtain statements from the donor, trustees or family members who can confirm the donor\u2019s intention. Consider expert evidence where necessary: forensic accountants for tracing funds, pension actuaries for valuing schemes, or business valuers to explain why transferring business assets would destroy value.Legal arguments to exclude particular assetsArguing that pre-marital assets should be excludedShow clear separation and preservationTo argue that pre-marital assets should not form part of the pot show that you preserved them as separate before and during the marriage. Demonstrate that you refrained from using the asset for family life, maintained distinct records, and did not treat it as joint property.Establish the absence of contribution by the other spouseIf the other spouse made no financial or non-financial contribution to increase the value of the pre-marital asset emphasise that point. Courts do recognise non-financial contributions but quantify them relative to the asset\u2019s growth.Arguing that inheritances and gifts should be excludedProve the donor\u2019s intentionThe strongest cases for exclusion rest on evidence that a third party intended the gift or inheritance to belong solely to one spouse. Provide the will, letters, or witness statements that show donor intent.Avoid comminglingIf you inherited assets keep them separate. Use separate accounts, avoid paying joint bills from inherited funds, and do not use gifts to improve jointly-owned property unless you accept the implications for sharing.Trusts and complex ownership structuresBase arguments on legal ownership and beneficial interestIf assets sit in a trust or in a third party\u2019s name you must show that you have no beneficial interest. Where you do have a beneficial interest explain its scope and timing. The court will look through complex structures to the substance of ownership.Show lack of control or benefitIf a business or property registered in your name actually benefits a third party or operates under the control of someone else demonstrate that the economic benefit did not belong to the family during the marriage.Arguing business assets should be excluded or valued differentlyProtect the business valueCourts recognise the difference between extracting value from a business and dismantling its operating capacity. Argue for a valuation approach that preserves trading value, such as deferred payments, lump sums linked to sale proceeds, or gradual buyouts.Demonstrate that the business was a separate enterpriseIf you founded the business before marriage and kept it separate highlight the pre-marital founding, separate financing, and absence of partner contribution to growth. Where the other spouse did contribute ensure you have a considered approach to compensatory adjustment rather than exclusion.Pensions: arguments for limited sharingUse pension valuations and offsettingIf pensions represent the majority of your wealth you can argue for offsetting \u2014 giving the other party a larger share of housing assets instead of pension sharing. Provide robust pension valuations and show why pension sharing would cause unfairness.Argue for practical ordersThe court can make orders that respect pension complexities, such as phased pension sharing, pension attachment for short marriages, or clean break arrangements that avoid repeated future litigation.Tactical steps and practical adviceEarly case assessmentConduct an early financial audit with your lawyer. Identify assets likely to be contested and gather evidence promptly. Early preparation prevents loss of crucial records and strengthens your negotiating position.Use mediation and negotiationMediation, collaborative law and negotiation often achieve better outcomes than contested hearings. Use the evidence you gather to propose a settlement that recognises legitimate exclusions and offers fair compensatory adjustments where appropriate.Prepare a persuasive financial statementForm E is a central tool. Provide a clear schedule of assets, their origins and proposed characterisation. Use appendices to attach supporting documents and provide a narrative chronology that explains the financial history in simple terms.Consider interim ordersIf one party seeks to dissipate assets take urgent legal steps to freeze accounts, prevent disposal or secure the family home. Apply for interim financial relief where necessary to preserve the pot pending final resolution.Dispute resolution and court processesFinancial dispute resolution hearingsIf you cannot agree you may attend a financial dispute resolution (FDR) hearing. FDRs encourage settlement. Prepare a realistic proposal that recognises the court\u2019s starting point and highlights why particular assets should not be shared.Final hearings and evidence standardsAt a final financial remedies hearing the judge will weigh evidence, listen to submissions and apply section 25. Judges assess credibility, documentary proof and legal argument. Strong documentary evidence and clear legal analysis improve the chance of success.Common pitfalls to avoidRelying on oral promisesDo not rely solely on \u201che said she said\u201d statements. Courts prefer contemporaneous documents over after-the-event recollections.Commingling inheritances without planIf you mix inherited funds with joint finances you undermine arguments for exclusion. Take professional advice before using gifts for family purposes.Under-valuing pensions or businessesPensions and businesses require specialist valuations. Avoid guessing values or relying on out-of-date figures. Secure expert valuations and explain their methodology.When exclusion arguments will likely failNo clear separation or mutual treatment as joint propertyWhere parties treated an asset as a family resource the court will likely include it. Simple assertions of ownership rarely succeed without documentary and factual support.Short marriages with shared financesIn short marriages where parties pooled resources courts may take a different approach to assets that appear separate. Expect the court to focus on needs and fairness rather than rigidly excluding items.Practical examples and model approachesExample 1 \u2014 Inheritance kept separateScenario: Spouse A inherited a substantial sum during the marriage. They transferred it into a separate account, did not make joint payments from it and left it invested in separate name investments.Approach: Produce the will, bank transfers, account statements and correspondence with financial advisers. Ask the court to exclude the inheritance or make a compensatory deduction to reflect any indirect benefit the other spouse received.Example 2 \u2014 Business started before marriageScenario: Spouse B started a business before marriage but used profits to help family life. They did not transfer legal title or allow the other spouse a formal role.Approach: Obtain business accounts, company formation documents and expert valuation. Argue for exclusion or limited sharing, and propose arrangements such as deferred payments or retaining operational control to protect the business value.Example 3 \u2014 Property purchased during relationship with third party fundsScenario: Property was bought in one spouse\u2019s name using a family trust distribution intended for that spouse only.Approach: Produce trust deeds, distribution evidence and correspondence with trustees. Show donor intention and that the trust intended the asset for one spouse. If the other spouse treated the property as a family home address any indirect benefits and propose a compensatory solution.When to instruct specialistsForensic accountantsUse a forensic accountant to trace funds, explain commingling, and prepare schedules that separate matrimonial from non-matrimonial assets.Pension actuariesPension advice is technical. Instruct an actuary for defined benefit schemes and a pensions specialist for sharing options.Business valuersA specialist valuer will explain goodwill, market value and the impact of transfer on a going concern. This expertise helps the court make orders that do not destroy value.ConclusionThe court in England and Wales starts from principles of fairness, with equality as the starting point but flexibility to account for needs, compensation and non-matrimonial property. You can persuade the court that certain assets should not join the pot by preparing robust documentary evidence, showing donor intent for gifts and inheritances, demonstrating separation of pre-marital assets, and using expert valuations for pensions and businesses. Early planning, full disclosure and targeted specialist reports improve your position in negotiation or at court. Speak to us, experienced family lawyers to tailor the strategy to your circumstances and to ensure you meet procedural requirements and deadlines.Next steps&#8211; Gather bank statements, transfer records, wills and trust documents&#8211; Instruct a solicitor and consider early mediation&#8211; Obtain specialist valuations where pensions or businesses are involved&#8211; Prepare Form E with a clear schedule and supporting bundleIf you want a practical checklist or a template evidence bundle to use with your lawyer say which assets concern you and I will prepare a tailored list.Alexander JLO Solicitors are well aware that going through divorce can be very difficult. Whilst the implementation of no-fault divorce back in 2022 has made the legal process much simpler, there are times, especially in relation to financial matters, when input from an experienced solicitor is vital. With that in mind we have developed a revolutionary new service which will ascertain whether or not it\u2019s wise to have legal advice on finances when going through divorce. Simply called Form Easy it will assess your level and type of assets and determine if you qualify for a free, no-obligation consultation to discuss your case with us and decide on the best ways forward for you. Simply click the Form Easy button, or visit the page here, answer a few short questions and we will let you have our input on whether we can help.\u00a0At Alexander JLO we have many years of experience of dealing with all aspects of family law and will be happy to discuss your case in a free no obligation consultation. Why not call us on\u00a0+44 (0)20 7537 7000, email us at info@london-law.co.uk or get in touch via the contact us button and see what we can do for you?This blog was prepared by Peter Johnson on 2025 and is correct at the time of going to press. With over forty years of experience in almost all areas of law Peter is happy to assist with any legal issue that you have. He is widely regarded as one of London\u2019s leading divorce lawyers. His profile on the independent Review Solicitor website can be found\u00a0Here. To follow up on any of the above please contact Guy Wilton of our family department. Guy has wide experience of acting for the firm\u2019s clients, their family and their businesses. Guy\u2019s experience as a lawyer started in the Northern and Welsh Circuits, including the Liverpool Courts, where he represented numerous clients after being called to the Bar, before opting to join Alexander JLO in 2017 and qualifying as a solicitor in 2024. He is a highly experienced family lawyer with a particular interest in financial remedy proceedings and child contact disputes.Guy\u2019s profile on the independent Review Solicitor website can be viewed\u00a0here."},{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"name":"What Assets Go Into the Pot in a Divorce Settlement \u2014 And How to Argue They Shouldn\u2019t","item":"https:\/\/www.london-law.co.uk\/what-assets-go-into-the-pot-in-a-divorce-settlement-and-how-to-argue-they-shouldnt\/#breadcrumbitem"}]}]