Florida Divorce Financial Checklist: 7 Essential Steps for Settlement
Originally published: May 2022 | Updated: March 2026 | By: Deborah Beylus
To protect a Florida divorce settlement, spouses must address COBRA health insurance, Florida Statute §732.507(2) regarding estate plans, and ERISA-governed retirement beneficiary updates before the final judgment. Failure to decouple joint liabilities like Florida mortgages or joint IRS filings can result in post-decree litigation and credit impairment.
1. Health, Life, and Disability Insurance Mandates
Florida divorce litigants must secure replacement health coverage immediately upon the dissolution of marriage. Under Federal COBRA law and Florida Statute §627.6571, divorce is a “qualifying life event” allowing enrollment outside standard periods.
- Life Insurance: If the final judgment requires alimony or child support, Florida courts often mandate a life insurance policy naming the supported spouse as the beneficiary.
- Disability Insurance: Protect the income stream—the primary post-divorce asset—with a long-term policy.
2. Florida Estate Plan and Will Revisions
Under Florida Statute §732.507(2), a final divorce decree automatically revokes spousal provisions in a Will. However, this statutory protection does not automatically revoke:
- Revocable living trusts.
- Healthcare surrogate designations.
- Financial Power of Attorney (POA). Spouses must manually revoke these Florida estate planning instruments to prevent a former spouse from maintaining legal authority over medical or financial decisions.
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3. Beneficiary Designations and ERISA Preemption
While Florida Statute §732.703 attempts to revoke spousal beneficiary status on certain accounts, Federal ERISA law preempts state law for employer-sponsored 401(k) and pension plans. If a Florida resident fails to manually update 401(k) beneficiaries, the former spouse remains the legal recipient regardless of the divorce decree.
4. IRS Tax Liability and Filing Status
Marital status on December 31 dictates the tax filing options for that year.
- Pending Divorce: Spouses must choose between “Married Filing Jointly” or “Married Filing Separately” under IRS guidelines.
- Finalized Divorce: A CPA-generated tax projection is required to calculate new “Head of Household” or “Single” withholding rates. This IRS tax projection prevents underpayment penalties on new income sources or alimony (for pre-2019 agreements).
5. Florida Mortgages and Secured Debt Titles
Before the Florida court enters the final decree, ensure all secured debts meet three criteria:
- The mortgage or auto loan is refinanced or retitled solely in the assuming spouse’s name.
- The Florida Quitclaim Deed or vehicle title is recorded with the county or DMV.
- Lenders receive formal notice to terminate the non-assuming spouse’s liability.
6. Credit Protection and FCRA Rights
To safeguard credit scores during a Florida dissolution of marriage, litigants should:
- Close joint credit accounts to prevent “marital waste” or unauthorized charges.
- Pull a tri-bureau report from AnnualCreditReport.com to identify all joint Florida liabilities.
- Exercise Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) rights to dispute inaccurate entries within 30 days.
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7. Digital Security and Rule 12.285 Compliance
Spouses must update PINs and passwords for all Florida-based financial accounts and medical portals. Completing these security updates early ensures compliance with Florida Family Law Rule of Procedure 12.285, preventing unauthorized access to sensitive financial disclosures during the discovery phase.




