A financial checklist for divorce in New Jersey requires complete documentation across eight categories before divorce mediation begins or a New Jersey Superior Court case advances.
The eight categories include income records, employment records, marital and separate property classification, retirement accounts, debts and liabilities, federal and New Jersey tax history, insurance policies, business interests, and parenting cost documentation.
The New Jersey Case Information Statement (CIS, Form CN 10482) governs most financial negotiations because it standardizes disclosure in Family Part matters.
The CIS filing requirement and timing are set forth in Appendix V of the New Jersey Rules of Court, which states that when a CIS is required, it must be filed within 20 days after the Answer or Appearance.
A CDFA at Coastal Business Services can serve as a financial neutral in a New Jersey divorce so spouses can model settlement terms before agreements become binding. This checklist also connects to the broader NJ divorce finances hub for valuation logic, tax planning, and post-judgment cleanup.
The New Jersey Case Information Statement is the primary disclosure document that organizes income, assets, liabilities, expenses, and insurance into a standardized framework. The official CIS form is CN 10482, and the governing filing language appears in Appendix V.
Monmouth County spouses who mediate often treat the CIS as the negotiation baseline because the CIS forces both parties to commit to numbers and supporting documents early in the process. Spouses who want a process overview can start with the Monmouth County divorce mediation resource guide.
| CIS Category | What The CIS Captures | Consequence Of Omission Or Error |
| Income | W-2 wages, 1099 income, bonuses, deferred compensation, and rental income | Understated income distorts support analysis and increases post-judgment motion risk |
| Assets | Real estate, bank and brokerage, retirement plans, business interests, and valuables | Omitted assets distort equitable distribution positioning |
| Liabilities | Mortgage, HELOC, credit cards, student loans, auto loans | Unallocated debt can remain enforceable by creditors regardless of settlement language |
| Monthly Expenses | Housing, childcare, medical, transport, lifestyle costs | Understated expenses compress support assumptions and pendente lite positioning |
| Insurance | Health, life, disability, auto, homeowners, beneficiary designations | Missing policy data creates coverage gaps and beneficiary risk |
| Pending Litigation | Civil disputes, business claims, probate disputes, PI claims | Undisclosed claims create valuation blind spots and credibility exposure |
New Jersey child support calculations use a guideline methodology that starts from gross income concepts in the New Jersey Court Rules guidelines materials.
Appendix guidance appears in Appendix IX-A, and the New Jersey Supreme Court periodically updates guideline materials through published notices.
Income documentation differs by employment type.
Add-back analysis matters for self-employed income. Add-back analysis identifies personal expenses paid through a business that reduce taxable net income while remaining economically available for support.
Common Mistake. Business owners who enter mediation without a Schedule C add-back analysis agree to support assumptions based on artificially reduced net income.
Opposing counsel often requests multi-year business bank statements to test deposits against reported revenue, and unexplained gaps can trigger adverse inference arguments.
Coastal Business Services can audit your CIS documents, flag missing RSUs, retirement plans, and debts, and prep you for mediation. Schedule a discovery call.
If you’re ready to get started, call us now!
Equitable distribution in New Jersey follows the statutory factors set forth in N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23.1. Asset classification requires a marital-versus-separate determination plus traceability.
| Asset Signal | Likely Classification | Proof Required | Risk If Omitted Or Misclassified |
| Purchased jointly during marriage | Marital | Deed or account statements dated during marriage | Omission weakens equitable distribution leverage |
| Owned before marriage, no joint deposits | Separate | Premarital statement plus clean tracing | Commingling can erode separate characterization |
| Inheritance received during marriage | Often separate if traceable | Probate distribution record and deposit trail | Depositing into a joint account increases the commingling risk |
| Gift from a third party during marriage | Often separate if documented | Gift letter naming the recipient and the amount | Use for joint household benefit can trigger reclassification arguments |
| Business started during marriage | Often marital in whole or in part | Formation docs plus valuation inputs | No valuation support undermines bargaining position |
| Premarital retirement with marital contributions | Partially marital | Marriage-date statement and contribution history | Lack of tracing risks marital treatment of a larger portion |
Gross home equity does not equal spendable value. Net home equity subtracts sale transaction costs and potential tax exposure.
Capital gains exclusions for a principal residence follow 26 U.S.C. § 121, and the exclusion thresholds can change the net economics of selling or transferring a home.
Single-income mortgage sustainability also changes settlement math. Home retention decisions often require the carry-cost analysis outlined in maintaining a mortgage after divorce.
Spouses who compare gross home equity to retirement account face value without deducting transaction costs, capital gains exposure, and carry-cost sustainability routinely overvalue the home and undervalue retirement assets.
A Qualified Domestic Relations Order is an enforceable court order that directs a retirement plan administrator to pay a defined portion of benefits to an alternate payee. The ERISA QDRO framework is set forth in 29 U.S.C. § 1056, and the tax code definition is set forth in 26 U.S.C. § 414.
A Marital Settlement Agreement can allocate retirement benefits between spouses. A Marital Settlement Agreement does not compel an ERISA plan administrator to transfer benefits without a compliant QDRO.
| Account Type | Division Method | Governing Authority | Error Consequence |
| 401(k), 403(b), profit-sharing | QDRO required | 29 U.S.C. § 1056 and 26 U.S.C. § 414 | The plan administrator can refuse a transfer without a QDRO |
| Defined benefit pension | QDRO plus actuarial valuation | ERISA QDRO rules plus plan-specific terms | Survivor benefit errors can eliminate future benefits |
| IRA | Transfer incident to divorce | 26 U.S.C. § 408(d)(6) | Incorrect execution can trigger taxable distribution treatment |
| Federal or military pensions | Plan-specific order | Plan rules plus federal statutes | Standard QDRO templates can be rejected |
QDRO drafting should start at the time the Marital Settlement Agreement is executed because plan administrator pre-approval and court signature sequencing take time. Delay increases operational risk and can extend asset division timelines.
Spouses who negotiate retirement offsets using face value ignore embedded tax liability. Traditional retirement balances represent pre-tax value, and after-tax value depends on marginal tax rates, withdrawal horizon, and rollover execution.
If you’re ready to get started, call us now!
Federal alimony treatment changes the net economics of support. IRS guidance states that the payer spouse cannot deduct alimony for divorce instruments executed after 2018, and the recipient spouse does not include alimony in income under those post-2018 instruments, as summarized in IRS Topic No. 452.
| Tax Event | Practical Impact | Best Supporting Document |
| Post-2018 alimony tax treatment | Changes net cost assumptions for payor and recipient | IRS Topic 452 plus MSA effective date language |
| Filing status in the divorce year | Filing status can change withholding and refunds | Final judgment date stamp and year-end marital status |
| Dependency allocation and credits | Impact credits and refund outcomes | MSA dependency clause and tax filing history |
| Home sale gains and exclusions | Net proceeds depend on exclusions and timing | Closing statement and 26 U.S.C. § 121 considerations |
| Retirement distributions | Distribution timing can trigger taxable income | 1099-R and plan administrator paperwork |
Spouses who price alimony using pre-2019 deduction math assume a deduction that no longer applies for post-2018 divorce instruments, which creates settlement sustainability errors.
Divorce triggers immediate beneficiary and coverage decisions. Beneficiary designation forms often control retirement plan distributions until they are updated.
ERISA QDRO rules fall within the broader ERISA benefits framework in 29 U.S.C. § 1056, which underscores the importance of clean post-judgment plan administration.
Divorce is a COBRA qualifying event under 29 U.S.C. § 1163. Health insurance alternatives can include Marketplace enrollment during a Special Enrollment Period described in the HealthCare.gov Special Enrollment Period rules.
Divorced spouses who delay updating their retirement accounts and life insurance beneficiaries assume that the divorce judgment controls beneficiary rights. Beneficiary designation forms can control distributions until the account owner submits updated designations.
Parenting cost documentation improves support modeling because childcare, health costs, and school-related expenses have recurring patterns that require evidence.
College planning can also change the post-divorce financial picture.
For FAFSA and college financial aid planning that intersects with post-divorce income disclosure, use the impact of divorce on college financial aid.
If you want clean QDRO timing, accurate income add-backs, and a settlement you can sustain, schedule your consultation today with Coastal Business Services.
If you’re ready to get started, call us now!
A New Jersey divorce commonly requires the Case Information Statement (CN 10482) with supporting documentation of income, assets, debts, expenses, and insurance, and the filing requirement is set forth in Appendix V.
New Jersey uses equitable distribution criteria listed in N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23.1, which directs courts to weigh statutory factors rather than require an equal split.
A QDRO is the order that allows division of many employer retirement plans under 29 U.S.C. § 1056 and the tax-code definition in 26 U.S.C. § 414.
Federal alimony tax treatment for post-2018 divorce instruments follows IRS Topic No. 452 and the detailed divorce taxpayer guidance in IRS Publication 504.
Divorce is a COBRA qualifying event under 29 U.S.C. § 1163, and many Marketplace options start through the HealthCare.gov Special Enrollment Period.
Divorced spouse benefit eligibility rules appear in 42 U.S.C. § 402 and the SSA statutory compilation in SSA Section 202.