I often meet with couples who were together for decades before they could legally marry. Consider a couple who bought a townhome in Park Slope in 1998. They built a life, shared finances, and raised children. They celebrated when New York’s Marriage Equality Act passed in 2011 and married immediately. Now, as they contemplate divorce, the court must decide: is that townhome—their largest asset—marital property subject to division, or was it pre-marital property owned by one partner?
Divorce for same-sex couples presents questions that heterosexual couples do not face. The legal timeline of the marriage often fails to match the lived reality of the relationship. This disconnect demands careful legal thinking and prudent planning.
When Did the “Marital” Clock Start Ticking?
In any divorce, the court must distinguish between marital property acquired during the marriage and separate property acquired before. New York is an equitable distribution state, meaning the court divides marital property fairly—which does not always mean a 50/50 split. The challenge for many LGBTQ+ couples is defining that start date. Was it the wedding day in 2012? Or was it the day they opened their first joint bank account in 1995?
New York courts have grappled with this. While the law is clear about the date of marriage, an attorney can build a case based on the couple’s intent and actions over many years. We look at evidence of a long-term economic partnership: commingled funds, jointly titled assets purchased before the marriage, and even partnership agreements. Without a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement, disentangling these assets requires a meticulous reconstruction of a family’s financial history, often going back much further than the date on the marriage certificate.
This ambiguity also affects retirement accounts, pensions, and business valuations. If a partner’s 401(k) grew substantially during a 20-year relationship but only a 10-year legal marriage, determining the portion subject to division requires more than simple arithmetic. It demands a narrative of the relationship’s economic reality.
The Critical Task of Revising Your Estate Plan
Divorce is a significant life event that immediately renders your existing estate plan obsolete—and potentially dangerous. Your will, trusts, power of attorney, and health care proxy likely name your spouse as your primary beneficiary and fiduciary. During a divorce, most people do not want their soon-to-be-ex-spouse making life-or-death medical decisions or inheriting their entire estate.
Some protections exist. Under New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law § 5-1.4, a divorce decree automatically revokes dispositions to a former spouse in a will. However, this only happens *after* the divorce is final. During the separation and proceedings—which can take months or even years—your old documents remain in full effect.
This legal protection is not absolute. Beneficiary designations on life insurance policies, retirement accounts, and bank accounts are controlled by contract, not your will. If your ex-spouse is named as the beneficiary on your IRA, they will likely receive those funds, regardless of what your will or divorce decree says. Failing to update these documents is one of the most common and devastating mistakes I see. Stewardship of your legacy means being deliberate about who receives your assets and who is empowered to act on your behalf.
Parentage, Custody, and Long-Term Guardianship
For same-sex couples with children, questions of parentage can add another layer of profound concern. If a child was born to one partner, the other partner’s legal rights may not be secure without a formal second-parent adoption or other legal order of parentage. We have seen heartbreaking situations where a non-biological parent who has raised a child from birth faces a challenge to their fundamental right to custody or visitation during a contentious divorce.
Establishing clear, legally recognized parentage for both parents is the most important act of stewardship a couple can perform for their children. If this was not done during the marriage, it can become a central issue in a divorce. The court’s standard is always the best interests of the child, but proving those interests without a birth certificate or adoption decree in your name is a difficult, emotional, and expensive process.
The Divorce Process Itself
The grounds for divorce are laid out in New York’s Domestic Relations Law § 170. For years, most couples have used the “no-fault” ground, which states that the relationship has broken down irretrievably for a period of at least six months. This simplifies the act of filing for divorce, but it does nothing to simplify the actual division of a shared life.
The term “no-fault” is misleading. It doesn’t mean no-conflict. It simply means you do not have to prove abandonment, cruelty, or adultery to end the marriage. The real work—and the source of most disputes—lies in asset division, spousal support, and arrangements for children. For LGBTQ+ families, the unique history of their relationships before legal recognition means these disputes often have few direct precedents.
The end of a marriage marks the beginning of two new, separate financial lives. It is a moment that demands intentional action. Your focus must be on creating a stable foundation for your future and protecting the legacy you’ve worked so hard to build.
The first step in this transition is to understand exactly where you stand. A clear audit of your named fiduciaries—the people designated in your will, power of attorney, and health care proxy—can provide the clarity needed to make prudent decisions during a time of uncertainty.



