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A province-by-province breakdown of how property is divided when a Canadian marriage ends — homes, investments, pensions, businesses, and more.
Property division during a Canadian divorce is one of the most financially significant — and emotionally charged — processes you'll go through. The rules vary by province, and the stakes are enormous: how assets are divided can determine your financial security for decades. This guide explains the rules clearly, asset category by category, so you can enter negotiations and legal proceedings fully informed.
In most Canadian provinces, "family property" is broadly defined as assets accumulated during the marriage. This includes property that is only in one spouse's name. The underlying principle: marriage is an economic partnership, and both partners share equally in what was built together — regardless of who earned more or whose name is on the account.
| Province | Model | Key Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Equalization of Net Family Property | Each calculates NFP; higher-NFP spouse pays half the difference |
| BC | Equal division | All family property split 50/50; excluded property kept by owner |
| Alberta | Matrimonial property equal division | Equal division with judicial discretion for fairness |
| Quebec | Partnership of acquests | Civil law; acquests (earnings during marriage) split equally |
| Manitoba | Equal division | Similar to BC; family assets split equally |
| Saskatchewan | Equal division | Family property split equally; pre-marital property excluded |
| Nova Scotia | Matrimonial property equal division | Similar to Alberta |
The family home gets special treatment in most provinces — it's often the most valuable asset and the most contentious. In Ontario, both spouses have equal rights to stay in the matrimonial home regardless of who owns it, and it is always included in the NFP calculation (even if owned before marriage, the pre-marriage deduction doesn't apply to the home's value).
Common outcomes:
Non-registered investment accounts, chequing and savings accounts, and TFSAs accumulated during the marriage are family property. The balance at the date of separation is what's valued. Key considerations:
The portion of RRSPs and employer pensions accumulated during the marriage is family property:
Most provinces allow certain assets to be excluded from family property division:
The key word is "traceable" — if excluded money was commingled with family funds, it can lose its excluded status. Keep inherited or gifted assets in separate accounts if you want to preserve the exclusion.
If one or both spouses own a business, it's one of the most complex assets to value and divide. Issues include:
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Get KOHO Free — Code BREMO2026Debts are also divided. In most provinces, debts accumulated during the marriage are family debts regardless of whose name they're in. Key risks: