How separation and divorce affect your money, assets, debts, and financial obligations under Canadian law.
When a marriage or common-law relationship ends in Canada, the financial implications are significant and often complex. From property division and RRSP splits to child and spousal support, understanding the financial framework of Canadian family law helps you navigate separation with clarity. This guide covers the key financial aspects — note that family law is largely provincial, so rules vary by province.
In most Canadian provinces, assets and debts accumulated during a marriage are divided equally between spouses on separation. This is called "equalization" in Ontario, and similar concepts apply in most provinces. The key principle: each spouse is entitled to an equal share of the net family property accumulated during the marriage.
What's typically included in property division:
In Ontario and several other provinces, the matrimonial home has special status. Both spouses have equal right to possession of the family home regardless of whose name is on the title. The home cannot be sold or mortgaged without both spouses' consent while the marriage subsists. Its full value (not just the increase during marriage) is included in equalization, even if one spouse owned it before marriage.
Registered accounts accumulated during the marriage are subject to equalization or division. Key points:
Child support is governed by the Federal Child Support Guidelines, which set amounts based on the paying parent's income and the number of children. Child support is not tax-deductible for the payer and not taxable for the recipient (for orders made after May 1, 1997).
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| Basis | Federal guidelines, province-specific tables |
| Tax treatment (payer) | Not deductible |
| Tax treatment (recipient) | Not taxable income |
| Duration | Until child is no longer a "child of the marriage" (usually 18 or end of post-secondary) |
| Special expenses | Section 7 expenses (childcare, medical, tuition) shared proportionally to income |
Spousal support (alimony) may be paid when there is a significant income disparity between spouses or when one spouse sacrificed career advancement for family responsibilities. Unlike child support, spousal support has tax consequences:
These rules apply to periodic payments made under a court order or written agreement. Lump-sum spousal support payments generally do not have these tax consequences.
Common-law couples have different rights than married couples in most provinces. Generally:
Most separating couples reach a negotiated separation agreement rather than going to court. A separation agreement is a legally binding contract covering property division, support, and parenting arrangements. It should be drafted by or reviewed by a family lawyer for each party. Court orders are obtained when spouses cannot agree.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAFamily law and finances intersect in complex ways during separation and divorce. Property division, RRSP transfers, pension splits, child support, and spousal support all have significant financial and tax implications. Each province has its own rules. The most important step is getting qualified independent legal advice early — the decisions made during separation have long-lasting financial consequences for both parents and children.