How to protect your business during divorce
There is no single way to guarantee that a business will be protected, but sensible planning can help. Pre-nuptial agreements and post-nuptial agreements can be powerful tools if they are properly prepared and both people have had the right legal advice from an experienced family lawyer. While not automatically binding, courts will generally give significant weight to properly drafted agreements with the correct safeguards in place.
Good company documents can also help. Articles of association and shareholders’ agreements may deal with share transfers (including how shares are treated in a shareholder dispute), valuation methods and what should happen if a shareholder divorces.
Keeping personal and business finances separate is equally important, as it helps show the company’s true structure and purpose.
If the business existed before the marriage, records showing its value at that time may be useful. They can help identify any non-matrimonial element and show how much of the growth and development happened during the marriage.
During divorce proceedings, avoid sudden or unexplained changes to ownership, pay or company structure. These changes may be questioned and could damage trust or deepen a dispute. A calm, transparent approach is usually far more effective.
Finding a fair settlement
A practical settlement can often protect the business while still meeting both parties’ needs. This might involve a fair buyout, staged payments or transferring other assets so the company owner can retain control. These options can support a clean break and reduce the risk of ongoing disputes.
Where a business has grown significantly during the marriage, the value – wholly or in part – may be treated as matrimonial property. The court will often avoid damaging a healthy company particularly if it is a source of income, jobs, or for future financial stability.
A steady way forward
For business owners, the central point is reassurance. The family court is not designed to dismantle successful enterprises; it seeks fairness while recognising commercial realities.
Divorce involving a business can feel overwhelming, but it does not have to put the company at risk. With early planning, full disclosure and the right professional support, it is often possible to reach a fair financial settlement while keeping the business viable.
Non-court options such as mediation and solicitor-led negotiation can also help. They may reduce cost, delay and stress, while giving both sides more control over the outcome. If you are worried about divorce and business ownership, taking advice early is one of the best ways to protect your position.
*For further reading, refer to Section 25(2)(a) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973.
Contact our legal experts
If you are an SME owner, leader or manager considering divorce proceedings contact HM3 Legal for clear, practical advice and fixed fee options. From Chester, Liverpool, Manchester, Wirral, and across the North West, the company remains committed to its gold-standard service levels, B Corp certification, and people-first culture.
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Co-created with Melissa Worth
Partner & Head of Commercial Litigation
Melissa Worth is a client-focused lawyer who combines strategic thinking with a commercial mindset. She advises on complex commercial litigation and professional negligence claims. Her experience includes shareholder disagreements, disagreements over commercial contracts, financial or insurance issues and more. Acting as a trusted down-to-earth adviser, she is known for her strong negotiation skills, always protecting her clients’ interests while unlocking creative solutions.
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