UPDATING YOUR INVESTMENT STRATEGY AFTER A DIVORCE

Divorce is as much a financial transition as it is a personal one. The goal is not to make reactive decisions but to thoughtfully update your financial framework. This guide outlines the key considerations for refreshing your savings, investment approach, and retirement planning after a divorce while keeping tax rules, account mechanics, and long-term goals at the forefront.

Re-establish Your Financial Baseline

Before looking forward, you need a clear picture of your new starting point.

  • Cash Flow & Budget: Map out your current income, new expenses (like housing, insurance, and debt payments), and any support obligations you either pay or receive. A primary goal should be to build or rebuild an emergency fund. A common target is 3–6 months of essential living expenses, though your personal situation may warrant a larger cushion.
  • Account Inventory: Create a master list of every financial account now titled solely in your name. This includes checking, savings, brokerage accounts, HSAs, 529 plans, retirement plans (like 401(k)s and IRAs), and company stock plans. Note the custodian for each and ensure you have secure login credentials.
  • Credit & Identity: Pull your free annual credit reports from all three major bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion). Carefully review them to ensure any joint accounts have been closed or retitled. Consider placing a credit freeze or fraud alert on your file for added security during this transition.

Reframe Your Goals, Time Horizon, and Risk

Your financial plan’s foundation may have shifted. It’s essential to rebuild it with intention.

  • New Goals: Your timelines for major life events — such as buying a home, funding education, determining a retirement age, or planning your legacy — may have changed. Write down your new goals and prioritize them.
  • Risk Tolerance vs. Risk Capacity: Your emotional comfort with market volatility (risk tolerance) might have changed. More importantly, your financial ability to withstand losses (risk capacity) may be different with a new income and expense structure. If you have an Investment Policy Statement (IPS), now is the time to review and update it.
  • Asset Allocation & Location: Your mix of stocks, bonds, and cash should align with your new time horizon and risk profile. It’s also a good time to review your asset location strategy—that is, placing assets in the right type of account (taxable, tax-deferred, or tax-free) to improve your after-tax returns without triggering unnecessary tax events.

Update Titles, Beneficiaries, and Authorizations

This administrative task is critically important and often overlooked.

Beneficiaries: Review and update the beneficiary designations on all relevant accounts, including ERISA plans (401(k)s, 403(b)s), IRAs, HSAs, life insurance policies, and annuities. Remember, beneficiary designations on these accounts typically override instructions in a will.

Legal Authorizations: Update legal documents such as powers of attorney and healthcare directives to reflect your current wishes. Review any “Transfer on Death” (TOD) or “Pay

Account Security: Change your passwords and strengthen security with two-factor authentication on all financial accounts. Remove your former spouse from any shared access or authority where it is no longer appropriate.

Understanding Retirement Account Division

Dividing retirement assets involves specific legal and financial processes.

  • Qualified Plans (401(k)s, Pensions): The division of these accounts is executed via a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO), a legal document that instructs the plan administrator to pay a portion of the account to an “alternate payee” (the former spouse). A properly executed QDRO allows the transfer to occur without tax or penalty.
  • IRAs: IRAs are not divided by a QDRO. Instead, funds are moved via a “transfer incident to divorce,” which is typically documented in the divorce decree. To be tax-free, this must be handled as a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer.
  • Early Withdrawal Rules: Funds paid to an alternate payee from a qualified plan under a QDRO are exempt from the 10% early withdrawal penalty, though ordinary income tax will still apply. The rules for early withdrawals from an IRA are different and generally do not share this exemption.
  • Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs): If you are approaching the age of RMD, be sure to verify your obligations. The rules and starting ages were recently updated by the SECURE 2.0 Act.

Rebuild a Tax-Aware Strategy

Your tax situation will almost certainly change.

  • Filing Status: In the year your divorce is finalized, your tax filing status will change to “Single” or potentially “Head of Household.” This will affect your tax brackets and deductions. Adjust your W-4 withholding at work or your quarterly estimated tax payments to avoid a surprise bill.
  • Alimony & Child Support: Under current federal tax law, for divorce agreements executed after December 31, 2018, alimony payments are not deductible by the payer and are not considered taxable income for the recipient. Child support is never deductible or taxable.
  • Cost Basis: If you received assets like stocks or mutual funds in a taxable brokerage account, it is essential to obtain the cost basis (the original purchase price) and holding period for those assets. This information is necessary to correctly calculate capital gains taxes when you eventually sell.

A Post-Divorce Financial Checklist

[ ] Inventory all accounts, secure your logins, and close or retitle any remaining joint accounts.
[ ] Pull and review your credit reports.
[ ] Update beneficiaries on all retirement plans, IRAs, HSAs, and insurance policies.
[ ] Coordinate with legal counsel on any QDRO or IRA transfer.
[ ] Establish a new budget, rebuild your emergency fund, and automate your savings.
[ ] Re-evaluate your risk tolerance and capacity, and update your Investment Policy Statement (IPS).
[ ] Confirm your investment strategy aligns asset allocation and location with your new goals.
[ ] Update your will, powers of attorney, and other estate planning documents.
[ ] Clarify your new tax filing status, withholding, and cost basis on transferred assets.
[ ] Schedule regular financial reviews to track progress and make adjustments.

Navigating Your New Path with a Fiduciary Partner

The checklist above can feel overwhelming, especially during an already emotional time. Making sound, objective financial decisions is challenging when you are navigating so many other changes. This is where a professional partner can provide significant value.

The role of a fiduciary financial advisor is to serve as your thinking partner—helping you bring order, clarity, and discipline to your financial life. At Grey Ledge Advisors, we work with clients to translate their new goals into a coherent and durable financial strategy. This process involves not just reviewing investments, but also helping to coordinate with your legal and tax professionals to ensure all pieces of your financial picture work together.

If you are navigating a divorce and seeking a partner to help you confidently manage this transition, Grey Ledge Advisors is equipped to help you build a clear path forward.

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