Marriage
Divorce & Credit
- Joint bank accounts
- Credit cards
- Brokerage statements
- Tax returns
- Business interests
- Pension funds
- Social Security
- Loans
- Medical coverage
- Insurance (home, auto, life)
- Wills and trusts
- Marital assets (artwork, antiques)
- Mortgage
- Indebtedness
- Inheritances
- Safe deposit boxes
To Do If You Are Going Through
a Divorce
If you are considering a divorce, going
through a divorce, or are newly divorced or legally separated, you must pay careful
attention to your credit. Why?
Let's say that pursuant to your divorce decree,
your spouse is required to pay off two jointly held credit cards. A few months later,
he or she neglects to make payments as required, and your creditors contact you
demanding payment. You advise them that according to your divorce decree, your ex
is responsible for the debt. Not so, your creditors reply. Since they were not parties
to the decree, you are still legally responsible for paying off the joint accounts.
Although you can proceed against your ex for violating the decree, your creditors
still have the right to report any and all the late payments to the credit bureau.
Those negative marks are now part of your credit history.
If you have joint credit accounts while you are
separated or in the middle of divorce proceedings, ensure that regular payments
are being made. That way, your credit record won't suffer. It's important to remember
that as long as there is an outstanding balance on any joint account, both you and
your spouse are liable for it.
You should also ask creditors to close any joint
accounts or accounts on which your ex was an authorized user. In the alternative,
you can request that the creditor convert the joint account to an individual one
and have the debt transferred to the spouse who is responsible for paying it.
By law, creditors cannot automatically close a joint
account due to a change in marital status, but they can do so at the request of
either spouse. Creditors don't have to agree, however, to convert joint accounts
to individual ones. Instead, a creditor can require you to reapply for credit on
an individual basis and
then decide-based on your new application-to either extend
or deny you credit. Similarly, when a divorcing couple has a mortgage or home equity
loan, the lender will probably require you to refinance the loan to remove one spouse
from the obligation.

