4.6Top Rated Service 2026verified by TrustindexTrustindex verifies that the company has a review score above 4.5, based on reviews collected on Google over the past 12 months, qualifying it to receive the Top Rated Certificate.
High
Enter your details below for a free initial call.
A divorce does not automatically end financial claims between spouses. You may still need a financial settlement or clean-break order to deal with property, savings, pensions, debts, maintenance or future claims. To understand the likely outlay, see our guide to divorce solicitor costs.
If you are not yet divorcing, a separation agreement solicitor can record interim financial terms.
Our divorce solicitors advise private clients on divorce financial settlements across England and Wales. We help you understand what needs to be disclosed, what the court considers and how to protect yourself before agreeing terms.
Yes, you need a financial settlement even if you and your spouse agree on everything. Without a court-approved financial order, either spouse can make a financial claim at any point in the future. There is no time limit.
Scarsdale Solicitors handles divorce financial settlements across England and Wales. We advise on financial disclosure, negotiate settlements, draft consent orders, and represent clients at contested financial hearings in the Family Court. We charge fixed fees with no hourly billing, and every case is handled by a qualified solicitor.
We are a paid-services-only firm and do not offer Legal Aid.
Scarsdale Solicitors is an SRA-regulated law firm based in Rochdale and advising private clients across England and Wales. We help clients understand the legal process, likely costs, evidence and next steps before they make decisions during separation or divorce.
We are a paid-services-only firm and do not offer Legal Aid. Consultations are available in English, Urdu and Punjabi. Fees are discussed before work starts.
Getting divorced without sorting out the finances is one of the most expensive mistakes you can make. The divorce itself just ends the marriage. It does not end financial claims between you and your ex-spouse.
Under English law, financial claims survive divorce. Your ex-husband or ex-wife can apply to the court for a share of your assets at any point after the divorce, even 10 or 20 years later, unless a financial order has been made. The case of Wyatt v Vince [2015] UKSC 14 confirmed this: a woman successfully claimed against her ex-husband’s wealth more than 19 years after their divorce.
The only way to end financial claims for good is with a court-approved financial order. If you agree on how to split everything, that agreement is recorded in a consent order. If you cannot agree, the court decides for you at a contested hearing and makes the order itself. Either way, you need a financial order.
This applies even if you have nothing to split right now. If your circumstances change (you inherit money, build a business, receive a redundancy payment), your ex-spouse could make a claim against those future assets unless a clean break order is in place.
When deciding how to divide assets, the court follows Section 25 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. There is no automatic 50/50 rule. The court considers:
The first consideration is the welfare of any children under 18. Their housing and financial needs take priority over everything else.
For long marriages, the starting point is equal division. The court then adjusts based on the factors above. For short marriages without children, the court is more likely to return each spouse to their pre-marriage financial position.
The court can make several types of orders under Section 23 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. Most financial settlements involve a combination of these.
A lump sum order requires one spouse to pay a one-off amount to the other. This is common where one spouse keeps the family home, and the other receives cash to compensate. Lump sums can be paid in instalments if the full amount is not available immediately.
A property adjustment order transfers ownership of property from one spouse to the other, or orders the sale of a property and division of the proceeds. The family home is the most common example, but this also covers buy-to-let properties, commercial property, and land.
A pension sharing order splits one or both spouses’ pensions so each person has their own separate pension pot. A percentage of one spouse’s pension is transferred to the other spouse’s pension, or to a new pension set up for them. This gives both parties independent retirement provision.
Periodical payments (maintenance) are regular payments from one spouse to the other for a set period or until a specific event, such as remarriage or the youngest child finishing education. Periodical payments can be varied by the court if circumstances change.
A clean break order ends all financial claims between the spouses permanently. No further claims can be made by either side. The court prefers a clean break where possible because it allows both parties to move on without ongoing financial ties.
Most of our clients want a clean break. Where one spouse has a significantly lower income or earning capacity, maintenance for a fixed term (often called a “term order”) may be needed alongside the clean break on capital.
Before any financial settlement can be reached, both spouses must disclose their full financial position. This is done through Form E, a detailed financial statement that each person fills in and swears is accurate.
Form E covers everything: income, property, savings, investments, pensions, debts, personal belongings, business interests, and projected future needs. You must also attach 12 months of bank statements, recent payslips, property valuations, pension CEVs (cash equivalent values), and business accounts if applicable.
Full and honest disclosure is a legal requirement. If you hide assets or lie on your Form E, the court can set aside the entire financial order later. In serious cases, non-disclosure can lead to criminal prosecution for contempt of court.
We help our clients complete Form E thoroughly and review the other side’s Form E for gaps, inconsistencies, or signs that assets have been hidden. This is where many cases are won or lost: spotting a pension that was not declared, a property held through a company, or income diverted to a family member.
If you and your spouse agree on how to divide everything, your solicitors will draft a consent order that sets out the terms. Both of you sign it, and it is sent to the court for approval. A judge reviews the order to check that it is fair to both parties (and fair to any children). Once approved, it is legally binding and enforceable.
The court does reject consent orders. If the terms look lopsided, with one spouse getting almost everything while the other is left with very little, the judge will send it back with questions. Having a solicitor draft the order reduces the chance of rejection because we structure it in a way the court expects.
Most consent orders are approved without a hearing. The judge reviews the paperwork and approves it on paper.
If you cannot agree, either spouse can apply to the court for a financial order by filing Form A. This starts the formal financial proceedings, which follow a set timetable:
Most financial cases settle before the final hearing. The FDR stage resolves the majority of cases because both parties see the judge’s indication and adjust their positions. Going to a final hearing is expensive and unpredictable, so we always advise our clients to negotiate seriously at FDR.
Pensions are often the largest asset after the family home, and sometimes larger. A defined benefit pension worth £500,000 in cash equivalent terms is common for public sector workers, police officers, NHS staff, and long-serving employees of large companies. Ignoring pensions in a financial settlement can leave one spouse, usually the wife, with very little retirement income.
There are three ways to deal with pensions in divorce.
Pension sharing transfers a percentage of one spouse’s pension to the other spouse’s own pension. This gives each person their own independent pension and is the cleanest option. The percentage does not have to be 50%. It depends on the overall settlement, and a pension actuary can calculate what percentage produces equal retirement income (which is different from equal cash equivalent values).
Pension offsetting means one spouse keeps their pension while the other receives a larger share of other assets (typically equity in the family home) to compensate. This avoids splitting the pension but can be difficult to value fairly, especially with defined benefit schemes where the CETV (cash equivalent transfer value) often understates the true value.
Pension attachment directs part of the pension income to the other spouse when the pension holder retires. This is rarely used now because it ties the parties together. If the pension holder dies, the payments stop.
We instruct independent pension actuaries where the pension values are significant or the scheme is complex (such as final salary schemes, LGPS, or armed forces pensions). The actuarial report tells us what a fair share looks like in practice, not just on paper.
If either spouse owns a business, the business is a matrimonial asset that must be considered in the settlement. This does not always mean the business is split, but its value must be taken into account.
The court typically orders a single joint expert (an accountant) to value the business. The valuation method depends on the type of business: small sole traders and partnerships are valued differently from limited companies with employees and contracts.
Common issues we deal with:
We advise business owners on how to protect the company where possible. For example, by offsetting the business value against other assets so the non-owning spouse receives property or pension shares instead of a stake in the business.
Some financial settlements involve assets beyond the standard family home and pensions. We handle cases involving:
The treatment of inherited wealth depends on when it was received, whether it was mixed with matrimonial assets, and the needs of both parties. In long marriages, inherited assets are more likely to be treated as part of the matrimonial pot. In short marriages, they may be excluded.
For cases involving overseas assets, we work with solicitors in the relevant jurisdiction to value and access those assets. Enforcement of English financial orders against overseas assets can be complicated, and early legal advice is important.
A financial order is only useful if the other side complies with it. If your ex-spouse refuses to pay a lump sum, transfer property, or follow the terms of the consent order, you can apply to the court for enforcement.
The court has several enforcement options. A judgment summons requires the defaulting party to attend court and explain why they have not paid. A charging order secures the debt against a property they own. An attachment of earnings order diverts part of their salary directly to you. A third-party debt order freezes money in their bank account and has it paid to you. In serious cases of deliberate non-compliance, the court can commit the defaulting party to prison for contempt.
We handle enforcement applications for clients whose ex-spouses have failed to comply with financial orders.
Some financial orders can be changed after they are made. Periodical payments (maintenance) orders can be varied upwards or downwards if circumstances change. For example, if the paying spouse loses their job, or the receiving spouse starts earning significantly more.
Lump sum orders and property adjustment orders cannot normally be varied once made. Clean break orders are final.
A consent order can be set aside (cancelled) in limited circumstances: if one party failed to disclose assets, if there was fraud, or if there has been a significant and unforeseeable change in circumstances (such as the case of Barder v Caluori [1988] AC 20, where a spouse died shortly after the order was made).
We advise clients on whether a variation or a set-aside application is realistic before spending money on an application that has little chance of success.
We are regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA No. 629410). Scarsdale Solicitors Ltd is registered in England and Wales (company no. 10073834).
If you are going through a divorce, have already divorced without a financial order, or need to enforce an existing order, talk to us. Read more about our divorce services or learn about separation agreements if you are not ready to divorce yet.
If you are considering divorce, responding to divorce papers, separating finances or agreeing child arrangements, get advice before signing or submitting anything important.
Book your free confidential consultation! Or call 0161 660 6050.
Do I need a financial order after divorce?
In many cases, yes. Without a financial order, potential financial claims may remain open even after the divorce is final.
What is a clean-break order?
A clean-break order is a court-approved order intended to end future financial claims between former spouses where appropriate.
What does the court consider in a financial settlement?
The court considers factors such as income, earning capacity, property, pensions, needs, standard of living, age, health, length of marriage and contributions.
Real stories from clients who trusted us with their most important cases. Your peace of mind is our greatest testimonial. Read what our clients share about their journey with us.
I would like to thank Shazia and the Scarsdale team. Super efficient, fast responding and knew exactly what to do in the situation I was in. Highly recommend for any immigration needs
I would like to thank Shazia and the Scarsdale team. Super efficient, fast responding and knew exactly what to do in the situation I was in. Highly recommend for any immigration needs
Dynamic Program Designer