High-Asset Divorce Attorneys in Colorado
When there’s significant wealth on the table, the stakes of every decision are higher — and mistakes are far more expensive to undo.
- Denver
- Colorado Springs
- Fort Collins
- Greeley
Complex Property Division
What makes a divorce “high-asset”?
Colorado courts don’t apply a single dollar threshold that transforms an ordinary divorce into a high-asset case. In practice, a case becomes high-asset when the marital estate includes complex or illiquid assets — businesses, equity compensation, investment portfolios — whose value can’t be determined from a bank statement alone.
Common markers include a marital estate worth $1 million or more, ownership in a closely held business, executive compensation packages with deferred components, multiple real estate holdings, and substantial retirement accounts.
Colorado’s equitable distribution standard sounds straightforward, but dividing a portfolio of real estate, a family business, RSUs, and multiple retirement accounts requires a level of financial sophistication that goes well beyond a typical divorce case.
Business Interests
Ownership in closely held companies, partnerships, or professional practices requiring independent certified valuation.
Executive Compensation
Stock options, RSUs, and deferred bonuses with vesting timelines that straddle the marriage date.
Real Estate Portfolios
Investment properties, vacation homes, and commercial holdings each requiring appraisal and title review.
Retirement Assets
Defined benefit pensions, 401(k)s, and equity plans requiring QDROs and careful tax analysis.
Investment Accounts
Taxable brokerage accounts, hedge fund interests, and alternative investments.
International Assets
Cross-border holdings, foreign accounts, and overseas real estate requiring specialized coordination.
Colorado Law
How Colorado divides complex assets
Colorado is an equitable distribution state — meaning marital property is divided fairly, not necessarily equally. In high-asset cases, determining what’s “fair” involves detailed financial analysis and legal strategy.
Marital vs. separate property
Only marital property is subject to division. Separate property — assets one spouse owned before marriage, or received as a gift or inheritance — generally remains with that spouse. In high-asset cases, tracing the source and commingling history of assets is frequently contested and requires forensic accounting support.
Equitable distribution factors
- Length of the marriage and each spouse’s contributions
- Each spouse’s economic circumstances at the time of division
- Contributions to the acquisition and appreciation of marital assets
- Tax consequences of proposed division arrangements
- Whether one spouse depleted marital assets prior to divorce
At Divorce Matters, our attorneys handle complex, high-asset cases across Denver, Colorado Springs, and Fort Collins. We work alongside forensic accountants, business valuation experts, and real estate appraisers to make sure every asset is properly identified, accurately valued, and fairly divided.
— Divorce MattersFull financial disclosure and forensic review to locate all marital assets, including hidden or underreported holdings.
Independent appraisal of businesses, real estate, and equity compensation using certified financial experts.
Tracing assets to distinguish marital from separate property, accounting for commingling and appreciation.
Structuring settlement or litigation strategy to maximize your outcome across all asset classes simultaneously.
Business Ownership
Valuing a business in a Colorado divorce
When one or both spouses own a business, valuation becomes one of the most contested elements of a high-asset divorce. The business must be appraised as of a specific date, and different valuation methodologies — income approach, market approach, asset-based approach — can produce dramatically different numbers.
Complicating factors in Colorado include whether the business appreciation during marriage was active (marital) or passive (potentially separate), and whether “goodwill” — particularly professional goodwill tied to an individual’s reputation — is divisible.
Our attorneys work with certified business appraisers to build a defensible valuation and challenge opposing experts when figures are inflated or understated.
Key valuation considerations
- —Choice of valuation date and methodology (income vs. market vs. asset)
- —Treatment of enterprise goodwill vs. personal goodwill
- —Normalizing owner compensation for accurate income projections
- —Minority interest and marketability discounts
- —Active vs. passive appreciation during the marriage
- —Tracing pre-marital ownership contributions
Executive Compensation
Stock options, RSUs & executive compensation
Equity compensation is among the most complex assets to divide in a Colorado divorce. The central question is how much of a stock option or RSU grant is considered marital property — and the answer depends on when the grant was made, when it vests, and what formula the court uses to apportion the marital vs. non-marital portion.
Colorado courts have applied various apportionment formulas, and the results can differ significantly depending on how the analysis is framed. For unvested grants, there is also a question of whether and when they should be valued, and how to account for the risk of forfeiture.
Types of equity we regularly handle
- Non-qualified stock options (NQSOs)
- Incentive stock options (ISOs)
- Restricted stock units (RSUs)
- Performance share units (PSUs)
- Employee stock purchase plans (ESPPs)
- Carried interest and partnership profits interests
- Deferred compensation arrangements
Property Holdings
Multiple properties and real estate holdings
Each property in a marital estate requires its own appraisal and title analysis. For investment properties, rental income and depreciation recapture also enter the picture. Vacation homes held jointly or purchased with commingled funds may involve partial separate property claims that require detailed tracing.
Where a family home or investment property carries a mortgage, the outstanding debt must be accounted for alongside the equity. In cases with multiple properties, our attorneys help structure buyout arrangements, deferred sale agreements, or equalization payments that reflect the full tax-adjusted value of each asset — not just the current market price.
Retirement & QDROs
Retirement accounts and QDROs in high-asset cases
Retirement accounts — including 401(k)s, IRAs, pensions, and deferred compensation plans — are subject to division in Colorado divorce, but only the portion accumulated during the marriage is generally marital property.
Dividing a qualified plan requires a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO), a separate legal document that must be approved by the plan administrator. Errors in a QDRO can result in tax liabilities, forfeiture of benefits, or distributions that differ from what was negotiated.
Our attorneys draft and review QDROs as part of every high-asset case involving retirement assets.
Retirement assets commonly divided in Colorado
- —401(k) and 403(b) plans — require QDRO
- —Defined benefit pensions — actuarial analysis required
- —IRAs — divided via transfer incident to divorce
- —Deferred compensation plans — timing and tax issues
- —Stock option plans through employer — vesting analysis
- —Executive supplemental retirement plans (SERPs)
Errors in a QDRO can result in tax liabilities, forfeiture of benefits, or distributions that differ from what was negotiated. We draft and review QDROs for every high-asset case.
— Divorce MattersOur Expert Network
Working with financial experts
High-asset divorces are won or lost on the quality of the financial analysis behind them. We maintain relationships with trusted experts across Colorado.
Forensic Accountants
Trace commingled funds, uncover hidden assets, and reconstruct complete financial histories through formal discovery.
Business Appraisers
Provide certified valuations of closely held companies, professional practices, and partnership interests.
Real Estate Appraisers
Appraise investment properties, vacation homes, and commercial real estate across Colorado’s varied markets.
Why Divorce Matters
Why your attorney choice matters more in high-asset cases
In a standard divorce, a procedural misstep can often be corrected. In a high-asset case, the same error may mean accepting a settlement that permanently costs you.
Three Colorado Offices
Unlike single-location competitors, our offices in Denver, Colorado Springs, and Fort Collins let us serve clients with assets spread across the entire state.
100+ Years Combined Experience
Our attorneys have handled virtually every scenario in a significant Colorado divorce — businesses, equity comp, pensions, and complex property.
Financial Sophistication
We bring a level of financial depth that most family law firms cannot match, working with certified experts to build defensible valuations and strategies.
Skilled Negotiators
We know when to negotiate and when to litigate — and we’re prepared to do both at the highest level on your behalf.
Statewide Reach
High-net-worth clients often have assets, properties, and business interests across Colorado. We follow your case wherever it goes.
Personal Approach
Compassion for our clients is the product of our human approach to practicing family law. You work directly with your attorney.
Common Questions
Frequently asked questions
How does Colorado’s equitable distribution standard work in high-asset divorces?
Colorado divides marital property equitably — meaning fairly given the circumstances, not necessarily 50/50. Courts consider the length of the marriage, each spouse’s financial situation, contributions to the marital estate, and the tax consequences of different division options.
Can my spouse hide assets in a high-asset Colorado divorce?
Both spouses are required to provide full financial disclosure. If you believe assets are being concealed, your attorney can use formal discovery tools — including subpoenas, depositions, and document requests — and engage a forensic accountant. Courts treat concealment seriously and can impose sanctions.
How is a business valued in a Colorado divorce?
Business valuation is conducted by a certified appraiser using the income approach, market approach, or asset-based approach. The choice of method and key assumptions significantly affect the result. In contested cases, each spouse may retain a separate expert and the court weighs their analyses.
Do I need a QDRO to divide a retirement account?
For employer-sponsored plans like 401(k)s and pensions, yes. A Qualified Domestic Relations Order is required to divide those assets without triggering taxes or early withdrawal penalties. At Divorce Matters, we handle QDRO drafting as part of every case involving retirement assets.
Are unvested stock options considered marital property in Colorado?
Potentially, yes. Colorado courts examine why the options were granted — whether they were compensation for past service during the marriage, an incentive for future service, or both. Options granted for past marital service are generally treated as marital property even if unvested.
Does it matter which Colorado city I’m in?
Not when you work with Divorce Matters. We have offices in Denver, Colorado Springs, and Fort Collins, allowing us to represent clients throughout the state. Many high-asset clients have assets, businesses, and properties across multiple locations.
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Our attorneys bring financial sophistication and decades of combined experience to every complex property case. Consultations are confidential. There are no obligations.
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