
Who gets the house in a divorce in Nevada depends on the individual circumstances of the marriage. Nevada law determines who should keep the house based on factors such as how the couple acquired the home, how the spouses used and maintained it during the marriage, the ability of either party to solely take on the debt and associated expenses, and whether the spouses can resolve the issue without court intervention.
At Mills & Anderson, our Nevada divorce lawyers work with individuals and families across Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, Henderson, and Clark County who are navigating property decisions during divorce. With more than 70 years of combined experience in Nevada family law, we provide direct guidance from attorneys who stay involved throughout the case. We help clients reach informed, workable outcomes.
Learn how we can assist you by calling (702) 386-0030 or filling out our online form today.
- 1. Nevada Divorce Laws: Property Division
- 2. What Factors Influence Who Keeps the House?
- 3. Frequently Asked Questions
- 4. Dividing Property with Steady Guidance
Nevada Divorce Laws: Property Division
Nevada law generally treats property acquired during marriage as belonging to both spouses. That property is separate or community property. When spouses divorce, they divide community property.
Nevada law encourages spouses to resolve property issues through negotiation, but it also provides clear guidance when court involvement becomes necessary. When spouses cannot agree on property division, they ask a judge to divide property using the state’s community property rules. Those rules start with the assumption that the court should divide marital property equally. However, the manner of that division including who receives what assets is within the discretion of the Court and based on the arguments of the parties.
Marital Property
Community property, also called marital property, generally includes assets that either spouse earns or acquires during the marriage. In practical terms, the property the couple earns, builds, or purchases together after the wedding is typically marital.
It can also include:
- Income,
- Retirement contributions, and
- Real estate.
A home purchased during the marriage usually qualifies as community property, even when only one spouse appears on the title.
Separate Property
Separate property belongs solely to one spouse.
In Nevada, separate property generally includes assets:
- A spouse owned before the marriage,
- Inheritances, and
- Gifts to one spouse individually.
The spouse who owns separate property typically keeps it after divorce, but there are exceptions, especially when it comes to a house the couple lived in and maintained together.
What Factors Influence Who Keeps the House?
From a practical standpoint, deciding who keeps the house usually starts with understanding how the home fits into your life during the marriage. Courts, mediators, and negotiating spouses focus less on labels and more on how you lived in the home, how you paid for it, and what outcome you can realistically carry forward after the divorce.
Factors at Play When the Marital Home Is Marital Property
If you and your spouse acquired the home together, Nevada law generally treats it as community property. In that situation, the decision about who keeps the house focuses less on ownership and more on practicality and balance.
Use of the Home
One key factor is how you used the home during the marriage. When the house served as the primary family residence, couples often look for an outcome that avoids unnecessary disruption. Avoiding disruption is especially important when children live in the home, and maintaining routines supports stability during the transition. These factors can support the primary parent staying in the home.
Affordability of One Spouse Keeping the Home
Another major factor is whether you can afford to keep the home on your own. Courts and mediators look at your ability to refinance, manage a single-income mortgage, and handle ongoing expenses such as taxes, insurance, and maintenance.
Equity in the Home
Equity also influences the analysis. If the home has significant equity, keeping it usually requires accounting for your spouse’s share of that equity. That may involve one spouse buying out the other’s interest in the house or offsetting that interest using other marital assets. When equity is limited, or a buyout does not make financial sense, selling the home and dividing the proceeds may provide the cleanest resolution.
When the Marital Home Started as Separate Property
When one spouse owned the home before marriage, you may wonder, Does my spouse have any right to my house if I owned it before marriage in Nevada? Even though the home may have started as separate property, what happened during the marriage matters.
Maintenance and Home Expenses
A key consideration is how you and your spouse paid for and maintained the home. If you used marital income to cover mortgage payments, fund improvements, or pay for major upkeep, those contributions may give the marriage a financial stake in the home’s increased value. If your spouse contributed to the house, they may have a claim to part of the equity tied to those shared contributions, even if the home began as yours alone.
To decide how to treat a marital home that started as marital property, you also consider how integrated the home became into your shared financial life. Using community funds to pay for and maintain the property can change much of the home’s value from separate to community, even when only one spouse’s name is on the title.
As with marital property, affordability and equity still matter if the home started as separate. You may keep the home if you can afford to buy out your spouse’s interest in it. In other cases, selling the house and dividing the proceeds may be a more workable path forward.
How the House Fits Into the Bigger Property Picture
Finally, consider how keeping or selling the house fits into your overall property division. Looking at the house alongside other assets and debts often helps you reach an outcome that feels workable to balance the value of the house against the rest of the marital estate, meaning all property the spouses jointly own.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can One Spouse Keep the House If the Other Spouse Agrees?
Yes. If you and your spouse agree on who keeps the house, Nevada courts generally approve your proposed arrangement.
Do I Have to Sell the House in a Nevada Divorce?
No. Selling the house is one option, but whether you have to sell depends on the specific circumstances.
Does It Matter Whose Name Is on the Deed?
Yes, but not by itself. While the deed can matter for ownership history, Nevada divorce courts focus more on how the home was acquired, and paid for during the marriage.
Dividing Property with Steady Guidance
Who gets the house in a divorce in Nevada depends on how the spouses classify the property, how they paid for and used it during the marriage, and how they choose to resolve the issue. With the right guidance, divorcing spouses can move through the process feeling informed rather than overwhelmed.
At Mills & Anderson, we help clients navigate property division with steady support. We work directly with you to explain your options, organize the necessary information, and guide you toward a resolution that fits your circumstances. Contact us online or call (702) 386-0030 today to discuss your situation and plan your next steps.
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