Your Financial Reset Checklist

What people often need to update after separation.

Separation touches every part of your financial life. This is a genuine checklist — not affiliate marketing — designed to help you rebuild with clarity and confidence.

You do not need to do everything at once. Start with the items that feel most urgent. Your DivorceIQ report includes tailored guidance on many of these areas based on your specific situation. This checklist is here to help you think about what comes next — at your own pace.

01

Mortgage & Housing

Review your mortgage in joint names, explore remortgaging options, understand affordability on a single income, and consider whether to stay, sell, or buy out.

When: As soon as you know who stays in the home
💡 Get a mortgage agreement in principle before negotiating property terms.
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02

Wills & Beneficiaries

Update your will, change beneficiaries on pensions, life insurance, ISAs, and bank accounts. Without changes, your ex may still inherit.

When: Immediately after separation
💡 A separated spouse can still inherit under an existing will until it is changed.
03

Pensions & Nominations

Review pension nominations, understand CETV implications, check if you are still a beneficiary on your ex's pension, and consider pension sharing orders.

When: During financial disclosure
💡 Request CETVs early — they take up to 3 months and are only valid for 3 months.
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04

Insurance Policies

Review life insurance, critical illness cover, income protection, and buildings/contents insurance. Update joint policies and consider your own standalone cover.

When: Within the first few weeks
💡 Do not cancel life insurance until new arrangements are in place.
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05

Savings & ISAs

Separate joint accounts, open individual accounts, review ISA allowances, and ensure your savings are in your name only.

When: As soon as finances are being divided
💡 ISA withdrawals lose the tax-free wrapper — plan carefully.
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06

Budget & Spending

Rebuild your monthly budget on a single income. Understand your new housing costs, childcare costs, and what surplus or deficit looks like.

When: Before or during settlement negotiations
💡 Your DivorceIQ report includes a 10-year cashflow forecast to help with this.
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07

Debt Restructuring

Separate joint debts, close joint credit cards, understand liability for shared debts, and plan a debt clearance strategy from the settlement if needed.

When: During financial disclosure
💡 Joint debt means both parties are liable — even after separation.
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08

Childcare Planning

Formalise childcare arrangements, understand CMS calculations, plan for school costs, and ensure maintenance reflects actual needs.

When: When care arrangements are clear
💡 CMS calculations depend on shared care nights — document overnight stays carefully.
09

Utilities & Bills

Transfer utility accounts, broadband, TV licences, council tax, and household subscriptions into individual names.

When: When household arrangements change
💡 Council tax liability can be complex if one person moves out mid-period.
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10

Financial Rebuilding

Rebuild credit scores, establish independent banking history, rebuild savings, and plan for medium-term financial goals after the settlement.

When: After the settlement is finalised
💡 Your credit score may be affected by joint accounts — check your report regularly.

Trusted Advisory Support

Curated resources to help you navigate the practical financial decisions that follow a settlement. These are plain-English advisory panels — not flashing advertisements.

Post-Divorce Mortgage Advisory Services

Specialist mortgage brokers who understand how divorce settlements, maintenance income, and single-income applications affect mortgage eligibility. They can help you assess whether staying in the family home, buying out your ex, or purchasing a new property is realistic on your post-settlement income.

Specialist divorce mortgage brokersSingle-income affordabilityBuy-out calculations

Fixed-Fee Pension Allocation Experts

Pension on Divorce Experts (PODE) and independent financial advisers who specialise in pension sharing orders, CETV analysis, and offsetting calculations. Fixed-fee services available to evaluate whether a pension sharing order or offsetting against other assets is the better financial decision in your specific case.

Pension sharing specialistsPODE reports from £1,500CETV analysis
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Fixed-Fee Consent Order Review

Law Society family law accredited solicitors offering fixed-fee consent order drafting and review. Hand them your DivorceIQ report as a pre-prepared financial summary to reduce billable hours. Typical fixed fees: £350–£950 for consent order drafting (one party), £250–£500 for independent legal review (second party).

Family Law accreditedFixed-fee from £350Consent order drafting

These are curated advisory resource categories — not specific endorsements. Always verify credentials, check the Law Society register, and obtain fee agreements in writing before instructing any professional.

Start with clarity, not confusion

Your DivorceIQ report includes tailored guidance on many of these areas. Start the assessment to understand your financial position first.

Start My Settlement Report →
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