Can I Afford to Get Divorced? What Women Need to Know Before Making a Decision

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woman discusses with her female cdfa if she can afford to get divorced

One of the most common questions I hear from women sitting across from me is some version of: "Can I actually afford to do this?"

They are not asking because they want to stay in a painful marriage. They are asking because they are terrified of the financial unknown. They have heard horror stories. They have watched friends struggle. They have done the math on one income and felt their stomach drop.

Here is what I want you to know: financial fear is one of the biggest reasons women delay leaving marriages that are no longer serving them. And while that fear is completely understandable, making a decision this significant without the right information can cost you far more in the long run than the divorce itself.

This guide is here to help you think clearly about the real financial cost of divorce so you can make a decision rooted in clarity, not fear.

The Real Question Is Not "Can I Afford to Get Divorced?" It Is "Can I Afford Not To?"

Before we dive into numbers, I want to reframe this question entirely.

Staying in a marriage for financial reasons alone is not a financial strategy. It is a survival strategy. And survival strategies come with their own costs: emotional, physical, professional, and yes, even financial.

Women in unhappy or high-conflict marriages often experience reduced career performance, health issues that require expensive care, and an overall deterioration in their quality of life that has real dollar values attached. The cost of staying is just less visible than the cost of leaving.

That said, you absolutely need to go into divorce with your eyes open. Divorce is a financial transition, and like any major financial transition, it requires a plan. If you are in Ohio, our complete guide to divorce financial planning in Ohio is a good place to start building that picture.

What Does Divorce Actually Cost?

The first number women want to know is the legal cost. And while attorney fees vary widely depending on your state, the complexity of your situation, and whether you pursue litigation or an alternative like mediation, here is a general range to consider.

An uncontested divorce where both parties agree on the major terms is significantly less expensive than a contested divorce. Mediation and collaborative divorce processes can cost a fraction of what a courtroom battle runs. On the higher end, highly contested divorces involving business valuations, custody disputes, or significant assets can cost tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees alone.

But legal fees are just the beginning. The full financial picture of divorce includes:

Immediate costs to budget for:

  • Attorney retainers and hourly fees
  • Filing fees and court costs
  • Mediator or financial neutral fees
  • Certified Divorce Financial Analyst (CDFA) fees
  • Temporary housing or deposits if you are moving
  • Moving expenses
  • Short-term increases in living expenses while the process is ongoing

Longer-term financial shifts:

  • Transitioning from dual income to single income (or from one income household to managing your own finances for the first time)
  • Changes to health insurance coverage and costs
  • Loss of a spouse's employer-sponsored benefits
  • Tax status changes from married filing jointly to single or head of household
  • Potential need for additional childcare or household support

The good news is that many of these costs are one-time or temporary. Once you are through the transition, your financial picture can stabilize and, with the right plan, grow significantly.

Understanding Your Current Financial Position

Before you can know whether you can afford divorce, you need a clear picture of where you are right now. This is the step most women skip, and it is the one that matters most.

Start by gathering the following:

Income documentation: Pay stubs, tax returns from the last two to three years, any investment account statements, business income records if applicable, Social Security benefit estimates.

Asset documentation: Bank account statements, retirement account balances (401k, IRA, pension), brokerage accounts, real estate values, vehicle values, business interests.

Liability documentation: Mortgage balance, car loans, credit card balances, student loans, any other debt.

Expense documentation: What does it actually cost to run your household right now? This includes the monthly bills that are easy to track and the irregular expenses that often get forgotten, such as insurance premiums, car maintenance, healthcare costs, and home repairs.

Many women I work with have never seen the full financial picture of their marriage laid out in one place. That exercise alone can be clarifying and sometimes even empowering. Our divorce financial planning and analysis service is built around exactly this kind of thorough picture-building.

What Might You Be Entitled To?

This is where working with a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst becomes incredibly valuable. Many women significantly underestimate what they may be entitled to in a divorce settlement, and that underestimation has long-term consequences.

Depending on your state laws and the specifics of your situation, you may be entitled to:

Division of marital assets: In most states, assets accumulated during the marriage are subject to division. This includes retirement accounts, investment accounts, real estate equity, and business interests. Yes, that includes your spouse's 401(k) that you may have had no hand in building. A Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) can allow you to receive your share of a retirement account without tax penalties. Read more about how QDROs work and what happens to retirement accounts in divorce.

Spousal support or alimony: If there is a significant income disparity between you and your spouse, or if you have been out of the workforce caring for children or supporting your spouse's career, you may be entitled to spousal support. The duration and amount vary by state, but this is not something to overlook or negotiate away without understanding its full value.

Child support: If you have minor children, child support is calculated based on both parents' incomes and custody arrangements. This is separate from your own financial settlement and is intended to support your children's needs, not your lifestyle.

Marital home: What happens to the house is one of the most emotionally charged and financially complex decisions in divorce. Keeping the home is not always the best financial decision, even though it often feels like the safest one. Understanding what you can realistically afford to maintain a home on your post-divorce income is critical.

The Hidden Cost of Emotional Decision-Making

One of the most expensive mistakes women make in divorce is letting emotions drive financial decisions.

Wanting to stay in the house because it represents stability for the children. Agreeing to a lower settlement to end the conflict faster. Giving up retirement assets because they feel abstract compared to cash. Not pushing for what you are entitled to because you just want to be done.

I understand all of these impulses. I have sat with hundreds of women navigating this exact terrain. But these decisions have a price tag, and it is one you will pay for years, sometimes decades.

A Certified Divorce Financial Analyst helps you model out what different settlement scenarios actually look like five, ten, and twenty years down the road. A settlement that looks fair today may leave you financially vulnerable at retirement. A settlement that requires some negotiation now may set you up for genuine financial independence.

This is exactly the kind of analysis that changes lives. You can learn more about how to divide assets in a divorce and what questions to be asking before you agree to anything.

 

Intentional Divorce Insights · Season 5

The Hidden Costs of Divorce You Need to Know Before Moving Forward

In this episode, Leah Hadley goes beyond legal fees to uncover the five hidden costs of divorce that most people never see coming — including the social fallout, career impact, financial surprises, effects on children, and the toll on your long-term health.

▶ Listen to the Episode

 

How to Reduce the Cost of Your Divorce

If cost is a primary concern, know that you have more control over this than you might think.

Choose the right process. Litigation is the most expensive path. Mediation, collaborative divorce, and kitchen table negotiations (with each party having their own attorney review) can dramatically reduce your costs. If your spouse is willing to work cooperatively, pursue that path first.

Get organized early. The more organized you are with your financial documents, the fewer billable hours your attorney spends tracking down information. Your preparation directly reduces your legal bill.

Use a CDFA. This may seem counterintuitive, but hiring a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst often reduces overall divorce costs. Rather than paying your attorney (at attorney rates) to run financial scenarios, a CDFA does that work at a lower hourly rate and with deeper financial expertise. The result is a better settlement negotiated more efficiently.

Do not duplicate legal work. If you and your spouse can agree on certain issues before engaging attorneys, you save significant time and money. Understanding what you actually need legal counsel on versus what you can agree on independently is valuable.

Avoid unnecessary conflict. High-conflict divorces are expensive divorces. This is not always within your control, but to the extent that you can, choosing de-escalation over retaliation will protect your financial resources.

Building Your Post-Divorce Financial Foundation

Affordability is not just about whether you can get through the divorce process. It is about whether you can build a stable, fulfilling financial life on the other side.

Here is where I want to challenge a limiting belief that many women carry into this conversation: the idea that life on your own income will never be as financially comfortable as life with two incomes.

That may be true in the short term. Most people experience a period of financial adjustment after divorce. But over the medium and long term, women who take control of their financial lives after divorce often reach a level of financial clarity and confidence they never had inside their marriage.

Because here is what changes when you are managing your own finances: you make intentional decisions. You track where your money goes. You build an emergency fund. You invest for your future. You stop outsourcing your financial wellbeing to someone else.

This is the transformation I have watched happen over and over again. It is not magic. It is what happens when a woman finally owns her financial story. Our post-divorce financial roadmap is designed to help you get there with a clear, step-by-step plan.

Questions to Ask Before Making Your Decision

If you are still in the "can I afford this" phase of thinking about divorce, here are the questions worth sitting with:

  • What does my current financial picture actually look like, and do I have full access to that information?
  • What am I potentially entitled to in a divorce settlement that I may not have considered?
  • What would my monthly budget look like on my own income, with or without support?
  • Am I making this decision based on fear of the financial unknown, or based on an actual assessment of my situation?
  • What would it cost me, financially and otherwise, to stay in this marriage for another five years?

If you cannot answer most of these questions today, that is exactly why working with a divorce financial planner before you file is so valuable. A single consultation can give you more clarity than months of anxious Googling.

Schedule a consultation with our team to get a clear financial picture before you decide.

FAQ: Can I Afford to Get Divorced?

How much does a divorce cost in Ohio? The cost of divorce in Ohio varies widely depending on whether it is contested or uncontested and which process you choose. An uncontested divorce handled through mediation can cost significantly less than a litigated divorce. Contested divorces involving complex assets, business valuations, or custody disputes can run into tens of thousands of dollars in attorney fees alone. Choosing mediation or working with a CDFA to reduce billable attorney hours are two of the most effective ways to control costs.

What am I entitled to in a divorce settlement? In Ohio, marital assets accumulated during the marriage are generally subject to equitable division. This includes retirement accounts, real estate equity, investment accounts, and business interests. You may also be entitled to spousal support depending on income disparity, length of marriage, and other factors. Many women significantly underestimate their entitlements, which is why a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst is so valuable before you negotiate anything.

Can I get divorced if I have no income or savings? Yes. Having little or no independent income or savings does not mean you cannot afford to divorce. You may be entitled to a share of marital assets, spousal support during and after the process, and potentially attorney fee contributions from your spouse depending on the income disparity. The first step is getting a clear financial picture of what exists in the marriage and what you may be entitled to.

Should I keep the house in a divorce? Keeping the house feels like the safe choice, but it is not always the best financial decision. The real question is whether you can afford the mortgage, taxes, insurance, and maintenance on your post-divorce income. Keeping a home you cannot sustain can create serious financial strain within a few years. A CDFA can help you model what keeping versus selling the house actually looks like long-term. Read more about navigating the house decision in divorce.

What is a CDFA and do I need one? A Certified Divorce Financial Analyst (CDFA) is a financial professional specifically trained in the financial aspects of divorce. Unlike an attorney, who focuses on the legal process, a CDFA helps you understand the long-term financial impact of different settlement scenarios, model retirement projections, and ensure you are not trading away assets that will matter significantly down the road. For most women facing a divorce involving any real assets, a CDFA is one of the most valuable investments you can make. Learn more about our CDFA services here.

How do I protect my retirement accounts in a divorce? Retirement accounts are among the most commonly mishandled assets in divorce. Dividing them incorrectly can trigger taxes and penalties. A Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) is the legal mechanism used to divide most employer-sponsored retirement plans without penalty. It is critical to get this right. Read our full guide to what happens to retirement accounts in divorce.


Leah Hadley is a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst (CDFA) and founder of Intentional Divorce Solutions. She helps women across Ohio navigate the financial complexity of divorce with clarity, confidence, and a plan for what comes next.

 

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