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Specialty tag(s): Gray Divorce, Divorce
Esther R. Donald | April 28, 2026

Key Takeaways
A long marriage can feel like a comfortable life blueprint — shared homes, joint retirement accounts, familiar routines built over decades. So, when that structure breaks apart, often in your 50s or 60s, you’re not just dividing assets. You’re rethinking your future. That’s the reality of gray divorce — a rising trend that’s reshaping how adults reaching retirement approach money, care, and personal security in the second half of life.
This guide covers the full financial timeline of a gray divorce — from the steps you should take during the settlement process to the decisions that shape your independence after it’s finalized.
“Gray divorce” refers to the dissolution of marriage among adults aged 50 and older. And it’s a growing phenomenon. According to research from Bowling Green State University, divorce rates among adults over 50 have more than doubled since 1990. Among those 65 and older, the rate has nearly tripled.
The financial fallout can be serious. A long-term marriage usually means deeply entwined finances, shared business interests, and years of assumptions about a joint retirement. Untangling that isn’t just emotionally difficult — it can be economically destabilizing.
Research from Bowling Green State University (Brown & Lin, 2021) found that for adults divorcing at age 50 or older, women’s standard of living drops by about 45%, compared to 21% for men. That kind of gap makes it essential to plan carefully at every stage of the process.
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The financial decisions you make during your divorce settlement will shape your security for decades. Before the divorce is finalized, focus on separating shared finances, dividing retirement assets, and making informed decisions about major assets like the family home.
Separating joint finances is one of the most urgent steps in a gray divorce. Open an individual bank account in your name only. Redirect any income, benefits, or automatic payments to your new account. Close or remove yourself from joint credit cards. Contact each creditor to confirm the change in writing.
Freeze your credit with Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. A credit freeze prevents new accounts from being opened in your name without your knowledge. If you share a mortgage, auto loan, or other secured debt, explore refinancing into one name. Joint debt remains your responsibility regardless of what a divorce decree says. Creditors can still pursue either party until the account is formally restructured.
If you have limited credit history in your own name, consider a secured credit card or a credit-builder loan. These are tools designed to help you establish an independent credit profile. Consistent, on-time payments on even a small balance will build your score over time.
When you’ve spent decades building a shared life, you’ve also likely built shared wealth — real estate, retirement accounts, pensions, and sometimes businesses. In a gray divorce, these aren’t just assets; they’re the architecture of your long-term security.
A Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) is a legal tool used to divide retirement accounts like 401(k)s and other employer-sponsored plans during a divorce. Work with your attorney to file a QDRO for each eligible account. The QDRO directs the plan administrator to pay a specified portion of the account to the non-participant spouse without triggering early withdrawal penalties.
Request a copy of any pension plan summary from your spouse’s employer or plan administrator. Check whether the plan includes spousal entitlements. Benefits vary depending on plan rules and state laws, so review the details with your attorney before agreeing to a settlement.
Contact the Social Security Administration to understand how divorce affects your benefits. If your marriage lasted 10 years or more, you may be eligible to claim on a former spouse’s record. Compare that amount against your own earned benefit and factor the higher figure into your long-term retirement plan.
Review the tax consequences of every asset split before you finalize your settlement. Dividing retirement accounts, investment portfolios, or real estate can trigger capital gains taxes, early withdrawal penalties, or unexpected income tax liabilities. Ask your attorney or a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst (CDFA) to model the after-tax value of each asset, not just the face value. Underestimating the tax consequences of asset splits is one of the most common and costly financial mistakes in gray divorce.
The family home is often the largest single asset divided in a gray divorce. The decision to keep or sell it should be based on affordability, not emotion.
Evaluate whether you can cover the mortgage, property taxes, insurance, and maintenance on a single income. If housing costs consume more than 30–35% of your gross monthly income, the home may be putting your retirement savings at risk.
Downsizing or relocating to a lower-cost area can free up significant equity. That equity can be redirected into retirement accounts or an emergency fund. On the other hand, if the home is paid off or nearly so, and the ongoing costs are manageable, keeping it may provide stability during a difficult transition.
There is no single right answer. The key is making the decision based on a realistic budget rather than emotional attachment. Holding onto a house you cannot afford on one income is one of the most common financial mistakes in gray divorce.
A Certified Divorce Financial Analyst (CDFA) is a financial professional who specializes in the financial complexities of divorce. Unlike a general financial planner, a CDFA is trained to evaluate asset division, tax consequences, and long-term settlement modeling — comparing how different settlement scenarios will affect your finances over time.
Consider hiring a CDFA during the divorce process to ensure your settlement supports your long-term goals. After your divorce is finalized, you can transition to a broader financial advisor for ongoing planning.
Once your divorce is final, the focus shifts from dividing assets to building a stable financial life on your own. That starts with a realistic budget, a plan to grow your income, and a longer-term view of retirement.
A post-divorce budget is a spending plan built around your income alone. It accounts for what you earn, what you owe, and what you need to save. Creating one is the foundation of financial stability after a gray divorce.
Start by listing every source of income you will have going forward. This may include salary, alimony, spousal support, Social Security, or investment returns. Then list your fixed costs: housing, insurance, utilities, and debt payments. Finally, list your variable expenses: groceries, transportation, and personal spending.
Compare total income against total expenses. Identify where you need to cut back. Prioritize essentials first and look for areas where spending can flex — subscriptions, dining out, or discretionary travel. The goal is a budget that covers your needs with room to save.
Within that budget, aim to build an emergency fund of three to six months’ worth of essential expenses. An emergency fund is a cash reserve set aside for unexpected costs like medical bills, car repairs, or a gap in income. Even small, regular contributions add up and reduce the risk of falling into debt during the transition.
If you’ve paused or slowed your career to support a spouse or raise children, the economic impact may be especially steep. Re-entering the workforce after a long career break can significantly improve financial security after a gray divorce.
Start by assessing your current skills and identifying gaps. Community colleges, online platforms, and professional certification programs offer flexible options for upskilling. Fields like healthcare, bookkeeping, project management, and IT support have strong demand for experienced professionals and often accept career changers.
If you are already working, consider whether a promotion, a lateral move to a higher-paying role, or freelance and consulting work could increase your income. Even a modest income boost in your 50s or 60s can have a meaningful impact on retirement savings when compounded over several years.
Divorce doesn’t mean retirement is off the table. But it might mean adjusting when and how you reach it. Ask yourself:
You don’t have to figure it out alone. A financial advisor familiar with post-divorce planning can help you rebalance your portfolio, review your budget, and ensure your settlement supports your lifestyle goals. Remember: you’re not just preserving money; you’re rebuilding confidence.
Gray divorce isn’t just about finances. It’s about autonomy. That includes thinking ahead to who will advocate for you, who can access your medical information, and how your estate will be handled. Now is the time to:
If you’re considering remarriage, a prenuptial agreement can also offer security — not just for you, but for your children or grandchildren. It may feel awkward, but clear legal agreements can protect the hard-earned stability you’ve worked to rebuild.
It’s normal to feel disoriented. Divorce later in life shakes up your financial expectations and your identity. But it can also be a turning point. Not just an end, but a new beginning.
Many people emerge from a gray divorce with a clearer sense of their values and goals. They travel, start new businesses, reconnect with family, or prioritize health in ways they hadn’t before. Financial security helps make that possible, and that starts with understanding your options, assembling a team you trust, and giving yourself the permission to start fresh.
Gray divorce may upend the future you once envisioned, but it also opens the door to something new — a chapter shaped by choice, clarity, and control. With the right knowledge and guidance, you can move forward not just prepared, but ready to turn the second half of life into something wholly your own.
Esther R. Donald is a partner at Goranson Bain Ausley and a credentialed collaborative divorce lawyer, one of a select few in Texas, focused solely on out-of-court family law solutions. She helps clients navigate collaborative and cooperative divorces, premarital and marital property agreements, and complex matters like customized parenting plans, gray divorce, and high-net-worth estates. Esther is a longtime leader in collaborative law statewide and has been consistently recognized by the U.S. News Best Lawyers in America® (2017–2026), Thomson Reuters Texas Super Lawyers® (2016–2025), and D Magazine’s Best Lawyers in Dallas (2025).
Our attorneys are experienced in all aspects of family law and will guide you through each step of the process, ensuring you have the information you need to make wise decisions and prepare for the future.
At Goranson Bain Ausley, we strive to deliver clarity about what comes next and confidence that you and your family’s future are more secure. Contact our team and discover how we can help you.
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