Is Texas a 50/50 Divorce State? What Community Property Actually Means for Your House, Retirement, and Savings
Texas is a community property state — but that does not mean everything splits 50/50. That distinction matters enormously if you own a home, have retirement accounts, or have significant savings going into a divorce. This guide explains exactly what community property means in Texas, how courts divide it, what stays yours as separate property, and how an agreed uncontested divorce lets you control the outcome instead of leaving it to a judge.
The Short Answer: Texas Is NOT a 50/50 State
Texas is a community property state — meaning most assets and debts acquired during the marriage are owned equally by both spouses. But community property does not automatically mean a 50/50 split at divorce.
Under Texas Family Code § 7.001, community property must be divided in a manner the court finds “just and right” — a legal standard that gives judges broad discretion to award one spouse more than the other based on the specific circumstances of the marriage. A 50/50 split is common in many uncontested divorces because both parties agree to it — not because the law requires it.
In an uncontested divorce, you and your spouse set the terms. You are not bound by what a judge might order — you negotiate your own “just and right” agreement, and a licensed attorney documents it properly.
Community Property vs. Separate Property — The Critical Distinction
Before any divorce can divide property, every asset and debt must be classified as either community property (subject to division) or separate property (stays with the owning spouse). This classification is the foundation of every Texas property division.
- Income earned by either spouse during marriage
- Home purchased during the marriage
- 401k / retirement contributions made during marriage
- Bank accounts funded with marital income
- Vehicles purchased during the marriage
- Debts incurred by either spouse during marriage
- Business interests built during marriage
- Stock options vested during marriage
- Property owned before the marriage
- Gifts received by one spouse during marriage
- Inheritances received during marriage
- Personal injury settlements (excluding lost wages)
- Pre-marriage retirement account balances
- Property purchased entirely with separate funds
- Assets defined as separate in a prenuptial agreement
The presumption works against you
Under Texas Family Code § 3.003, all property possessed by either spouse at the time of divorce is presumed to be community property. To claim something as separate property, you must prove it by clear and convincing evidence — a high legal standard. Without documentation, even property you owned before marriage may be treated as community property.
What Happens to the House in a Texas Divorce
The family home is typically the largest single asset in a Texas divorce — and the one that generates the most questions. Here is how it works.
If the home was purchased during the marriage with community funds, it is community property regardless of whose name is on the deed. Both spouses have an equal ownership interest. The name on the title does not determine ownership for divorce purposes.
In an uncontested divorce, both spouses agree on one of these outcomes:
One Spouse Keeps the Home
The keeping spouse buys out the other’s equity share. Requires refinancing the mortgage in the keeping spouse’s name alone — the other spouse must be removed from the loan, not just the deed.
Home Is Sold
Both spouses agree to sell. Net equity after payoff and selling costs is divided per the agreed percentage. Clean exit — neither spouse is financially tied to the other after closing.
Delayed Sale
Often used when children are involved. One spouse stays in the home until a trigger event (children finish school, home reaches a target value), then the home is sold and equity divided. Requires very precise decree language.
Offset With Other Assets
One spouse keeps the home; the other receives equivalent value in other assets — retirement funds, savings, or other property — to balance the equity. No buyout cash required.
The mortgage trap — critical to understand
A divorce decree can order your spouse to pay the mortgage — but your mortgage lender is not bound by your divorce agreement. If your name is still on the loan and your spouse defaults, your credit is damaged and the lender can pursue you. The only way to remove your name from the mortgage obligation is to refinance the loan in the other spouse’s name, or sell the property. The decree language alone is not enough.
What Happens to Retirement Accounts in a Texas Divorce
Retirement accounts are community property to the extent they were funded during the marriage. This includes 401(k)s, 403(b)s, pensions, and IRAs funded with marital income. The pre-marriage balance and any post-divorce contributions are separate property.
Dividing a retirement account requires a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) — a separate court order that instructs the plan administrator how to split the account. Without a properly drafted QDRO, the plan administrator will not divide the account, and attempting to withdraw funds without one triggers taxes and early withdrawal penalties.
In an uncontested divorce both spouses agree on the percentage split, a QDRO specialist drafts the order, and the transfer occurs completely tax-free. At 2500Divorce.com, QDRO coordination is included in our $4,500 Property/Retirement package at $450 per retirement account for the specialist fee. Court filing fees billed separately at cost. See our full QDRO & Retirement Accounts guide →
What Happens to Debt in a Texas Divorce
Debts acquired during the marriage are community property just like assets. Credit card debt, car loans, a mortgage, and personal loans taken out during the marriage are all subject to division.
| Debt Type | How Typically Handled | Risk if Not Handled Cleanly |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage | Refinance in one name, or sell property | Both spouses remain liable if name stays on loan |
| Joint credit card | Pay off at divorce, or transfer balance to one spouse | Default by one spouse damages both credit scores |
| Car loan | Refinance in keeping spouse’s name | Same credit exposure risk as mortgage |
| Student loans | Usually assigned to the borrowing spouse | Generally treated as that spouse’s separate obligation |
| Business debt | Depends on business structure — complex | May require contested representation |
The “Just and Right” Standard — What Factors Courts Consider
When a judge divides community property in a contested Texas divorce, these are the factors they weigh under the “just and right” standard:
- Fault in the breakup — adultery, cruelty, or abandonment can result in a disproportionate award to the innocent spouse
- Earning capacity — a spouse with significantly lower earning potential may receive more
- Age and health — a spouse in poor health may need more resources
- Length of marriage — longer marriages often result in more equal divisions
- Size of separate estates — a spouse with significant separate property may receive less community property
- Custody of children — the custodial parent may be awarded the family home
- Education and future employability — a spouse who left the workforce may receive more
In an uncontested divorce, none of these factors are decided by a judge — you and your spouse set the terms by agreement. That is one of the most underappreciated advantages of the uncontested process: you control the outcome.
How Property Division Works in an Uncontested Divorce
Here is the practical reality: the vast majority of Texas divorces — including those involving a home and retirement accounts — settle by agreement rather than going to trial. When both spouses can agree on how to divide their assets and debts, the entire property division process is straightforward and handled entirely by your attorney without a court hearing.
At 2500Divorce.com, our $4,500 flat-fee Property/Retirement package handles:
- Division of up to 2 real properties — buyout, sale, or delayed sale language
- Up to 2 QDROs — retirement account division coordinated with our specialist
- All deed transfer language in the Final Decree
- Debt allocation provisions
- Everything included in the with-children package if applicable
Court filing fees are billed separately at cost and disclosed upfront before you start. Financing available. See full pricing →
The agreed division advantage
When you negotiate your own property division rather than having a judge decide, you can structure creative solutions — like offsetting the home’s equity against retirement funds, or agreeing on a percentage split that reflects your specific circumstances — that a judge couldn’t or wouldn’t order. Uncontested property division is almost always better than litigated property division, even when one spouse “wins” in court.
When property division requires litigation
If your spouse is hiding assets, disputes what is community vs. separate property, or won’t agree on division terms — your case requires contested representation. Fritz & Phillips, P.C. handles complex contested property division throughout Southeast Texas, including business valuation, separate property tracing, and hidden asset discovery. Call (713) 930-2500.
Divide Your Property the Right Way — Without the Courtroom.
Agreed division of home and retirement accounts for a flat fee of $4,500 — including QDRO coordination. Licensed Texas attorneys. Most cases finalized in 61 days. Court filing fees billed separately at cost. Financing available.
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Free Guide: The Uncontested Divorce Advantage
The complete guide to uncontested divorce in Texas — written by Jessica Fritz, J.D. Everything you need to know before you call.
- The 61-day timeline, step by step
- How retirement accounts and property are handled
- Flat-fee pricing — what's included and what isn't
- 7-question flowchart to confirm you qualify
- Spousal support options courts can't order but agreements can