How Do Valuation Dates for Property Division Work in Texas Divorces?

March 18, 2026 | By Bailey & Galyen Attorneys at Law
How Do Valuation Dates for Property Division Work in Texas Divorces?

You file for divorce in February. Your portfolio is strong, and the housing market is booming. But divorce takes time. By the time your case heads to trial or mediation in November, the market has corrected, your 401(k) is down 12%, and interest rates have cooled the housing market.

The question is: Do you split the value of the assets as they were when you filed in February, or do you split the lower value in November?

In high-asset divorces, the answer to this question could shift the financial outcome by hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars. Texas property division relies on mathematical precision regarding when an asset is valued, not just what the asset is.

To determine the value of the community estate, Texas courts generally look to the evidence presented at the time of trial, not the date of separation or filing. However, strictly adhering to the calendar may sometimes produce unfair results.

Three primary timing factors dictate the financial outcome of a Texas divorce:

  • The "just and right" division standard, which allows the court to make equitable adjustments
  • The specific date selected for valuation (Trial Date vs. Alternate Dates)
  • The distinction between passive market changes and active value increases due to the efforts of one spouse after separation

If you’re wondering about how your property should be accurately valued, call Bailey & Galyen. We analyze the timeline of your assets and determine the valuation strategy that reflects the true nature of your estate.

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Key Takeaways for Valuation Dates in Texas Property Division

  1. The default valuation date is the time of trial, not separation. This means any market-based gains or losses that occur while the divorce is pending are typically shared by both spouses.
  2. Alternate dates may be used to prevent injustice. If a spouse intentionally wastes or hides assets, a court might value that asset as of a date before the misconduct occurred to ensure a fair division.
  3. The source of value change is a key factor. Courts distinguish between passive market fluctuations, which are shared, and active increases in value from one spouse's post-separation efforts, which may be treated differently.

The Time of Divorce Rule: Why Texas Defaults to the Trial Date

In many jurisdictions outside of Texas, the date of separation or the date of filing freezes the value of the marital estate. Texas operates differently.

The general rule in Texas, established through precedents such as Grossnickle v. Grossnickle, dictates that the value of community assets should be determined as close to the time of the property division (the trial) as possible.

The Problem With the Separation Date Assumption

Many spouses operate under the false belief that once they physically separate, their earnings and asset fluctuations are their own. This creates a significant gap between expectation and reality.

If a divorce process stretches over 18 months, the assets remain community property during that entire window. If a shared stock portfolio gains 20% during that separation period, that gain belongs to the community. Conversely, if a business operated by one spouse loses half its value due to market forces during that same period, the loss is shared by both.

The Systemic Rationale

It is easy to view this rule as unfair, especially if you are the spouse generating income or managing assets during the separation. However, the court’s objective is to divide the estate based on its actual value at the time the parties go their separate ways.

If a court used 18-month-old data from the date of filing, they would be dividing a theoretical estate that no longer exists. Valuing assets at the time of trial provides the court with the most current financial picture, allowing for a division that reflects the present reality.

Market Fluctuations Are Shared Risks

Until the judge signs the decree, the financial partnership remains intact in the eyes of the law. Just as married couples share in the upside of a bull market, they share the downside of a recession.

If you are holding volatile assets, such as cryptocurrency or concentrated stock positions, understanding this timeline is the first step in protecting your interests. We can help you assess your exposure to market shifts during the pendency of your case.

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Exceptions to the Rule: When Equity Demands a Different Date

While the trial date is the default standard for the timing of property valuation, it is not an absolute mandate. Texas judges retain broad discretion under the Texas Family Code to order a division of property that is "just and right."

Strict adherence to the trial date creates an absurdity or an injustice in some cases. When this happens, we build an argument for an alternate valuation date. These arguments typically rely on proving that the change in value was not due to market forces, but due to human behavior.

Dissipation of Assets (The Reconstituted Estate)

The most common reason to deviate from the trial date is when one spouse has drained assets.

Imagine a joint savings account had $100,000 at the time of separation or filing of the divorce petition. By the time of the trial, one spouse has spent the entire balance on gambling, gifts to a paramour, or lavish personal trips. On the trial date, the value of that account is $0.

If the judge strictly followed the time of trial rule, there would be nothing to divide. This is obviously inequitable.

In this scenario, Texas law allows the court to reconstitute the estate. The court calculates the value of the assets as if the waste had not occurred. We present evidence tracing the funds to show they were spent for non-community purposes, asking the court to value the account at its pre-depletion level ($100,000) and count that missing money against the spending spouse's share.

Active vs. Passive Appreciation

The source of a value change can sometimes persuade the court to use an alternative valuation date. Courts distinguish between changes caused by the market (passive) and changes caused by a spouse's work (active).

Passive Changes

If a house appreciates simply because the local real estate market is hot, that is passive appreciation. The court will almost always divide this value as of the trial date. Both spouses benefit from the luck of the market.

Active Changes

Consider a spouse who runs a consulting firm. After separation, that spouse works 80-hour weeks, lands three new major clients, and doubles the value of the business before the trial. That increase in value is arguably due to their exclusive, post-separation toil.

In this specific instance, an argument exists to value the business as of the date of separation. The logic is that the community estate should not benefit from the personal labor of a spouse after the marriage has effectively ended. Litigants must provide clear, tracing evidence to justify this deviation. The party requesting the alternate date has the responsibility to provide proof.

Real Estate Valuation: Managing Market Volatility

For most couples, the marital home or investment properties represent a large portion of their net worth. Real estate markets do not move in a straight line, and the timing of property appraisals is frequently a point of contention.

The Appreciation Issue

In a booming Texas housing market, a home may appreciate significantly between the date a divorce petition is filed and the final trial. Under the general rule, this equity is community property.

If your spouse moves out and you remain in the home and keep paying the mortgage while the divorce is pending, a $50,000 increase in value is still typically treated as marital/community appreciation, meaning your spouse may be entitled to a share even without contributing to the mortgage .

Appraisal Timing and Strategy

The date on the appraisal report matters. An appraisal conducted during the initial filing stages may be deemed irrelevant by a judge 12 months later.

We frequently see cases where one party relies on an old appraisal because the value is lower (if they are keeping the house) or higher (if they are being bought out). This strategy rarely holds up against a challenge. The opposing counsel will likely object to the evidence as stale.

The standard procedure to ensure accuracy is to order an updated appraisal shortly before mediation or trial. This captures the most recent market shifts and provides the court with defensible data.

Mortgage Paydown During Separation

Value includes both market price and equity. During the separation, one spouse typically continues to pay the mortgage.

Every payment made reduces the principal balance, thereby increasing the equity in the home. Since the house is still community property until the decree is signed, that principal reduction, which is funded by what is technically still community income, increases the pot of money to be divided.

Retirement and Investment Accounts: Defined Benefit vs. Defined Contribution

Retirement assets are treated differently depending on their structure. The method of valuation and the date applied change based on whether the plan is a pot of money (Defined Contribution) or a promise of future payments (Defined Benefit).

Defined Contribution Plans (401k, IRA)

These accounts have a specific cash value that fluctuates daily based on the stock market. Because the value is easily ascertainable, courts typically divide the number of shares or the cash value as of the date of divorce.

A common point of confusion involves contributions made after separation. If a spouse continues to contribute to their 401(k) after filing for divorce, are those contributions divisible?

  • Contributions: Money contributed after the divorce is final is separate property. Money contributed while the divorce is pending is usually community property, though arguments might be made depending on the source of funds.
  • Earnings: Investment growth on the community portion of the account remains community property until the divorce is final.

Defined Benefit Plans (Pensions)

Pensions are far more complicated because they do not have a balance you can look up online. They have a present value based on future payouts.

Texas courts typically utilize the Berry Formula (derived from Berry v. Berry) to value these plans. This approach creates a snapshot of the pension value.

The formula generally calculates the community interest based on the months of service during marriage versus the total months of service. However, the valuation is usually frozen at the date of divorce. This means the community share is based on the employee's rank and pay at the time of the divorce, not the potentially higher rank and pay they might achieve years later when they actually retire.

QDRO Timing

The division of these accounts is executed through a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO). While the QDRO is usually drafted after the decree is signed, the math within it relies heavily on the valuation date established during settlement or trial.

FAQs: Valuation Dates in Texas

What if we have been separated for ten years but never filed for divorce?

In Texas, you are married until a court decrees that you are divorced. Generally, assets accumulated during that decade-long separation are community property and valued at the time of the eventual trial. However, we might sometimes make arguments regarding abandonment or unfairness to adjust the division, though the presumption of community property remains strong.

Does cryptocurrency get valued at the time of purchase or time of trial?

Because cryptocurrency can fluctuate significantly in value, Texas courts generally value it based on credible evidence tied to a date that supports a “just and right” division of the community estate, often near the time of trial or division. However, the court has discretion to use a different valuation date if fairness requires it. If one spouse sells, transfers, or conceals cryptocurrency during the divorce and the court finds fraud on the community, the judge may reconstitute the community estate and effectively “add back” the value of the improperly disposed asset when dividing the property.

Can we use different dates for different assets?

Yes. Parties may agree to value the house as of the separation date and the retirement accounts as of the trial date, provided the total division remains just and right. Stipulating to these dates in a written agreement can simplify the process.

What happens if my spouse deliberately lowered the value of the business before trial?

This is known as fraud on the community or wasting assets. If proven, the court may recalculate the division of property. The court assesses the value the business would have had if the spouse had acted properly and awards the innocent spouse their share of that true value.

Who pays for the updated appraisal if the trial is delayed?

Typically, appraisal costs are paid from community funds or shared between the parties, but this is a negotiable item. While paying for a second appraisal due to a delay is frustrating, the cost of accuracy is frequently worth the expense in high-asset estates where values fluctuate significantly.

Bailey & Galyen Secures a Fair Valuation for Your Estate

Waiting for the court to assign a value without offering your own proactive evidence invites a division based on outdated numbers or incomplete pictures. While the Texas system prioritizes the date of trial, it allows for adjustments when the evidence supports them.

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R. Keith Spencer - Family Law Attorney

Do not let the complicated nature of forensic accounting or market volatility deter you from seeking the portion of the estate you are entitled to. We understand how to manage these timelines and present the strongest possible evidence for your case.

Call Bailey & Galyen to begin the valuation process. We will examine the timeline of your assets and ensure the numbers presented to the court reflect the true value of your community property.

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