By Sharie Reyes Albers, Partner, Virginia Family Law Center
Virginia uses an equitable distribution system. In every divorce, the court must examine what the parties own, what they owe, and how each asset or debt should be classified under Virginia Code § 20-107.3. Only after that classification can the judge decide how to divide the marital estate in a way the court considers fair.
The first task is simple to describe but often complicated in practice: every piece of property – bank accounts, retirement funds, real estate, business interests, vehicles, investments, and household items – must be labeled separate, marital, or hybrid. The classification determines whether the asset stays with one spouse or becomes part of the property division analysis.
Why Classification Matters
Classification drives everything else. Separate property stays with its owner. Marital property, and any marital portion of a hybrid asset, goes into the pool the court will divide. Hybrid assets must be broken down before any division occurs.
Equitable distribution doesn’t transfer title automatically. It allocates value and determines who ultimately receives what. That distinction matters for real estate, retirement accounts, and closely-held businesses.
How Virginia Courts Decide What’s Separate and What’s Marital
Separate property is usually easy to identify at the beginning. It includes what a spouse owned before the marriage, what was inherited, what was gifted by someone other than the spouse, and what was acquired after separation with non-marital funds. The lines blur, however, once money moves during the marriage.
A home bought with premarital money may remain separate unless marital funds or efforts become part of it. An inherited investment account can stay separate unless it is actively managed, increased in value through personal effort, or placed into a joint account. Virginia treats this as commingling or transmutation, and the spouse claiming a separate share must be able to trace it clearly. If the court cannot determine what portion is separate, the entire asset may be classified as marital.
Income or increased value tied to one spouse’s personal efforts adds another complication. When a spouse grows or manages a separate asset during the marriage, such as a family business, rental property, or investment portfolio, the increase can be treated as marital.
Because classification is a factual determination under § 20-107.3(A), judges have wide discretion, and it is difficult to overturn these decisions on appeal.
Dividing the Marital Property Once Classification Is Complete
After the court classifies the property, it applies the equitable distribution factors in § 20-107.3(E). The judge looks at the full context of the marriage: each spouse’s financial and non-financial contributions, how and when assets were acquired, whether either spouse misused marital funds, and any circumstances that affect what a fair division should look like.
A roughly equal split is common in Northern Virginia, but it is not automatic. A spouse who depleted marital assets, contributed little to the household, or exposed the family’s finances to unnecessary risk may receive a smaller share.
Courts have several tools for making the final division. They can transfer ownership of property, order the sale of an asset and divide the proceeds, or issue a monetary award when an equal distribution cannot be achieved through transfers alone.
Who Gets the Marital Home?
The marital residence tends to be the most emotionally and financially significant asset in a divorce. Whether one spouse keeps it, both sell it, or one buys out the other depends on equity, affordability, and each party’s goals.
Disputes frequently arise when one spouse contributed separate funds to the down payment. That contribution may be reimbursable if properly traced, but not if the funds were comingled beyond recognition during the marriage.
When a Spouse Wastes or Misuses Marital Assets
Virginia courts take marital waste seriously. A spouse who spends marital money for a purpose unrelated to the marriage, gifts to a romantic partner, gambling, unexplained withdrawals, excessive spending designed to deplete the estate, can be held responsible for that loss.
If the court finds dissipation, the judge may award the innocent spouse a larger share of the remaining marital property to offset what was squandered.
Debts Are Divided Too
Equitable distribution covers debts as well as assets. Any obligation incurred between the date of marriage and the date of separation is presumed to be marital under § 20-107.3, even if the debt is in only one spouse’s name. That presumption can be overcome if the evidence shows the debt served a non-marital purpose.
Imagine a spouse runs up thousands of dollars on a credit card just before separation. If the charges were for household expenses, the debt will likely be deemed marital. But if the spending was tied to an affair or unrelated personal expenses, the judge may classify it as that spouse’s separate responsibility.
How Virginia Family Law Center Helps
Equitable distribution cases are fact-heavy and often document-heavy. Tracing separate property, identifying commingling, valuing assets, and proving contributions all require careful preparation.
We work with parents and spouses across Fairfax, Prince William, Loudoun, Stafford, Arlington, and Alexandria to protect their financial interests and position their cases for strong settlement or litigation outcomes. Our attorney profiles and client reviews offer a closer look at how we approach these issues.
Contact Virginia Family Law Center today to schedule your consultation. Call us at 703.865.5839 or request a Free Case Review through our secure online form.
About the Author
Sharie Reyes Albers
is a Partner and senior family law attorney at Virginia Family Law Center, representing clients throughout Northern Virginia in divorce, child custody, visitation, child support, and equitable distribution matters. A Virginia lawyer since 2012, Ms. Albers practices exclusively in family law and is known for her courtroom skill, strategic case preparation, and steady guidance during high-conflict family disputes.
