Protecting Your Assets In A Tennessee Divorce

Protecting your assets in a Tennessee divorce requires early planning, clean documentation, and a clear understanding of how Tennessee courts divide property. Tennessee is an “equitable distribution” state – not a 50/50 state – so the court divides assets based on fairness, not automatically in half.

Understand What Is and Is NOT Marital Property

Separate Property (Usually Protected)

These usually are not divided in a TN divorce:

  • Assets owned before marriage
  • Inheritances (even during marriage, if kept separate)
  • Gifts given only to you
  • Pain and suffering portions of personal injury settlements

⚠️ BUT separate property can become marital if it’s:

  • Mixed with joint funds (commingled)
  • Used for joint expenses
  • Improved using marital money

Marital Property (Subject to Division)

This usually will be divided:

  • Income earned during the marriage
  • Homes bought during marriage
  • Retirement contributions during marriage
  • Businesses started during marriage
  • Joint bank accounts

Do NOT Comingle Separate Assets

This is one of the most common ways people lose protected assets.

Bad examples:

  • Depositing inheritance into a joint account
  • Using premarital savings to remodel the marital home
  • Adding your spouse’s name to a previously separate asset

Protection move:
Keep inheritances, gifts, and premarital money in separate accounts in your name only.

Document Everything Immediately

Before filing (or as soon as divorce becomes likely):

Gather and securely store:

  • Bank and credit card statements (12–24 months)
  • Retirement and investment account statements
  • Business financials
  • Mortgage and car loan documents
  • Deeds, titles, tax returns
  • Insurance and annuities

Why this matters:
Tennessee courts can penalize a spouse who hides, destroys, or manipulates finances.

Be Careful With the Marital Home

Key facts in TN:

  • Even if the house is in one name, it can still be marital.
  • If bought before marriage but paid with marital income → part becomes marital.
  • Appreciation during marriage may be partially divisible.

Ways to protect equity:

  • Prove your premarital down payment
  • Show mortgage payments from separate funds
  • Avoid refinancing into joint names if divorce is looming

Protect Your Business

If you own a business, this is huge in Tennessee divorces.

What’s at risk:

  • Business growth during marriage is usually marital
  • Even if business started before marriage

Protection strategies:

  • Keep clean, separate business accounting
  • Avoid paying personal expenses from business
  • Get a business valuation early
  • Use a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement if possible

Tennessee Allows Prenups & Postnups

If you’re:

  • Not yet divorced
  • In a SECOND marriage
  • A business owner or high earner

A postnuptial agreement can still protect:

  • Future income
  • Business growth
  • Certain assets

These are fully enforceable in Tennessee if done correctly.

Watch for “Dissipation of Assets” Claims

If one spouse:

  • Drains accounts
  • Hides money
  • Spends recklessly
  • Gambles or gives money to others

Tennessee courts can credit the other spouse back in the final division.

If you suspect this, get statements fast.

Do NOT Transfer Assets to Friends or Family

This backfires badly in TN courts:

  • Judges can reverse transfers
  • Add penalties
  • Award your spouse a larger share

This is considered fraudulent conveyance.

Spousal Support (Alimony) Impacts Asset Protection

Tennessee considers:

  • Length of marriage
  • Income gap
  • Earning potential
  • Health and education

If alimony risk is high:

  • Avoid sudden income increases before filing
  • Avoid unusual bonuses or distributions
  • Keep income reporting consistent and accurate

Hire a Tennessee Divorce Attorney EARLY

Asset protection is about:

  • Timing
  • Strategy
  • Documentation
  • Valuation

Even one consultation before filing can save tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Quick Tennessee Asset Protection Checklist

✅ Separate accounts for inheritances & gifts
✅ No commingling separate property
✅ Secure copies of all financial records
✅ Business valuation if applicable
✅ No asset transfers or cash withdrawals
✅ Understand marital vs separate property
✅ Legal guidance before filing