Not every divorce involves a house, investment accounts, or years of built-up savings. Many couples separate with little more than a car, some furniture, and a pile of shared debt. When that's the picture, the financial questions shift. It's no longer about who gets what — it's about who's responsible for which debts, how to protect your credit, and what a court actually focuses on when there isn't much to divide.
What "Almost Nothing" Usually Looks Like
Most people who feel they have nothing to divide fall into one of a few categories. Some have a negative net worth — more debt than assets. Some have a small amount of property that's roughly offset by what they owe. And some have assets on paper (like a car or a retirement account) but those assets come with corresponding liabilities or restrictions.
A "debt-only divorce" — where there are no meaningful assets, only shared liabilities — is more common than most people expect. Young couples, couples who married after a financial setback, and couples who spent heavily during the marriage can all end up here. The legal process still applies. Debt still needs to be assigned. And the financial decisions made during this process still have real consequences.
How Courts Divide Debt in a Divorce
Courts treat marital debt the same way they treat marital assets — it gets allocated between spouses. Generally, marital debt is any obligation incurred during the marriage for the benefit of the marriage. A shared credit card used for household expenses, a joint car loan, a mortgage — these are typically marital debts. Debt one spouse brought into the marriage, or debt incurred for entirely personal purposes, may be treated as separate depending on the circumstances and the state.
When a judge divides debt in an equitable distribution state, common factors include who incurred the debt and why, each spouse's income and ability to repay, who benefited from what the debt paid for, and whether the debt is tied to a specific asset. A car loan might go to whichever spouse is keeping the car. A credit card used primarily by one spouse may be assigned to them.
The Credit Risk Most People Miss
This is one of the most important things to understand in a low-asset, high-debt divorce: a divorce decree cannot change your contract with a lender.
When a judge orders your ex-spouse to pay a joint credit card, that order is between you and your spouse. The credit card company wasn't in the courtroom. Their agreement is still with both of you. If your ex stops paying, the lender may report late payments and defaults on your credit report — because your name is still on the account.
Your remedy in that situation is to go back to court and enforce the decree. But your credit may take real damage while that process plays out. This is why it matters to address joint accounts directly, not just in a divorce agreement.
- Joint credit cards: The cleanest outcome is to pay off and close joint accounts before or during the divorce. If that's not possible, consider whether one spouse can be removed as an authorized user — though that doesn't always work for primary account holders.
- Joint loans (auto, personal): Refinancing the loan in one spouse's name is the only way to remove the other from legal liability. The court can require this as part of the settlement, but the lender has to agree to the refinance.
- A mortgage: A divorce decree cannot remove a spouse from a mortgage. Only a refinance — which the lender must approve based on the remaining spouse's income and credit — accomplishes that. See our guide on what happens to a joint mortgage in a divorce for more on this.
Assets You Might Not Have Counted
Even when a couple feels they have very little, there are often overlooked items with real financial value. These may be small — but they still need to be addressed in any settlement.
-
Retirement accounts, even small ones A 401(k) with only a few thousand dollars is still a marital asset if contributions were made during the marriage. Dividing it requires a court order called a QDRO (Qualified Domestic Relations Order) — skipping that step may trigger taxes and early withdrawal penalties.
-
Pending tax refunds If a joint tax return is coming, that refund is marital property. Who receives it — or how it's split — should be spelled out in the settlement.
-
Security deposits A rental security deposit belongs to the tenant. If both spouses are on the lease, that deposit is a shared asset. Make sure it's addressed — whoever stays in the unit typically keeps it, but it should be documented.
-
Vehicles Even a car with a loan against it may have some equity — or even none. Either way, who takes the car and who takes the loan needs to be decided. If there's negative equity (you owe more than the car is worth), that gap is debt to be assigned.
-
Accrued but unpaid wages, bonuses, or commissions If one spouse earned income during the marriage that hasn't been paid out yet — a bonus, a commission, deferred compensation — it may be considered a marital asset even if the check hasn't arrived.
What Courts Actually Focus On
When assets are minimal, a judge's attention shifts toward the things that matter most in practice: debt allocation, support obligations, and sustainability.
Debt allocation and ability to pay. Courts generally try to avoid assigning more debt to a spouse than they can realistically handle. If one spouse earns significantly more, they may be expected to absorb more of the shared debt. The goal is a settlement that actually works — not one that sets someone up to default immediately.
Alimony or spousal support. In a low-asset divorce, one spouse may still have a significant income advantage over the other. Courts in most states can award spousal support even when there's little property to divide. The disparity in income may matter more than any property discussion. Our article on equitable distribution explains how courts think about fairness in these situations.
Child support if children are involved. Child support is calculated based on income — not assets. A low-asset divorce doesn't reduce child support obligations. In fact, in lower-income divorces, child support often becomes the single most financially significant outcome of the entire case.
Fairness that holds up over time. A judge knows that a settlement paper and a lived reality are two different things. If one spouse is assigned debt they demonstrably cannot pay, it creates problems — for both parties, and for the court if enforcement is needed later. Realistic arrangements tend to be favored over technically "equal" ones that immediately fail.
Marcus and Dana are divorcing after four years of marriage. Their total assets: one car worth $8,000 with a $5,500 loan against it, a joint checking account with $1,200, and a 401(k) in Marcus's name with $4,800 accumulated during the marriage. Their debts: $11,000 in joint credit card balances and a $700/month apartment lease with six months remaining.
In this scenario, the $3,000 in equity on the car, the $1,200 in checking, and the $4,800 in the 401(k) are marital assets — roughly $9,000 total before debts. The $11,000 in credit card debt is a marital liability. The household is net negative.
A settlement in this case might assign the car and its loan to Marcus (who commutes), divide the checking account equally, use a QDRO to split the 401(k), allocate the credit card debt between them based on whose spending created it, and address what happens with the lease. Neither walks away with much — but both leave with clarity about what they owe and to whom.
Practical Steps to Take Now
-
1
Pull your credit reportsKnow every account with your name on it — joint or otherwise. AnnualCreditReport.com gives you free reports from all three bureaus. You may find accounts you forgot about or weren't fully aware of.
-
2
Make a complete list of debts and whose name is on themJoint accounts, individual accounts, who is primary versus authorized user. This becomes the basis for your settlement discussion. Lenders don't care what a decree says — they care whose name is on the contract.
-
3
Close or separate joint accounts as soon as practicalLeaving joint accounts open during and after a divorce is a credit risk. Either pay them off and close them, or work with the lender to transfer balances to individual accounts. Get this done as early in the process as you can.
-
4
Don't overlook small retirement accountsEven a modest 401(k) needs a QDRO if it's being divided. Skipping this step and just agreeing verbally — or in writing without the proper court order — can result in taxes and penalties when the funds are eventually accessed.
-
5
Be realistic about what each person can actually payA settlement that assigns more debt than either person can carry isn't a settlement — it's a setup for default, damaged credit, and further legal action. Workable is better than "fair on paper."
Get a clear picture of your financial situation.
Use the free divorce financial calculator to map out assets, debts, and what a split might look like. Free, no login required.
Try the divorce financial calculator →