This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Florida attorney for advice specific to your situation.
One of the most stressful surprises in the Florida divorce process is the mandatory financial disclosure requirement. Under Florida Family Law Rule of Procedure 12.285, both parties in a divorce are required to exchange extensive financial documentation within 45 days of service. Miss the deadline and you can face court sanctions. Provide incomplete information and you could end up with a settlement based on an inaccurate financial picture.
The smart move is to start gathering these documents before you file — ideally while you still have easy access to all of the accounts and records you share with your spouse. Here are the nine categories you'll need.
1. Three Years of Tax Returns
Collect federal and state (if applicable) tax returns for the past three years — including all schedules, W-2s, and 1099s. If you filed jointly, both returns show the same income. If either spouse has business income, Schedule C or K-1 forms are especially important.
Why it matters: Tax returns are the single most reliable picture of household income over time. Discrepancies between tax returns and other income documents raise flags. They're also used to establish alimony and child support baselines and to verify business revenue claims.
2. Three Months of Pay Stubs
Gather recent pay stubs — at minimum the last three months — for both yourself and, if accessible, your spouse. Pay stubs show gross income, net income, tax withholdings, and any pre-tax deductions (health insurance, 401(k) contributions).
Why it matters: Florida child support calculations are based on both parents' net income per the Florida Child Support Guidelines (FL Statute 61.30). Alimony determinations also turn on documented income. Pay stubs are the most current income data point.
3. Three Months of Bank Statements
Pull three months of statements for every bank account you have — checking, savings, money market, and any joint accounts. If you have accounts your spouse may not know about, those need to be disclosed too. Florida's disclosure requirements cover all accounts, not just joint ones.
Why it matters: Bank statements reveal spending patterns, transfers, deposits, and withdrawals. Courts look for evidence of hidden assets, dissipation of marital funds (spending marital money improperly before divorce), and lifestyle expenses relevant to alimony.
4. Retirement Account Statements
Get the most recent statements for every retirement account either spouse has: 401(k)s, IRAs, Roth IRAs, 403(b)s, pensions, deferred compensation plans. Importantly, collect statements showing the balance as of the date of marriage as well, if possible — this helps establish which portion is marital vs. pre-marital property.
Why it matters: Retirement accounts are often the largest marital asset outside of a home. Under Florida equitable distribution law, the portion accumulated during the marriage is generally subject to division. You'll need a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) to divide most employer retirement plans without tax penalties.
5. Mortgage Statement and Property Documents
Collect the most recent mortgage statement showing principal balance, interest rate, and monthly payment. Also gather the deed to any real property, any home equity line of credit (HELOC) statements, and a recent property tax statement. If you don't own, your lease agreement may be relevant to establishing housing costs.
Why it matters: Real property is typically the most emotionally charged asset in a divorce. Understanding the equity position (current market value minus mortgage balance) is essential before any negotiation. You'll also need to decide whether to sell, refinance, or transfer title — and the mortgage docs inform all three options.
6. Credit Card and Loan Statements
Collect three months of statements for all credit cards, personal loans, auto loans, student loans, and lines of credit — joint or individual. Don't forget cards that are in your name only; those debts exist even if your spouse didn't use them.
Why it matters: Florida divides marital debts as well as marital assets. Knowing the total debt picture prevents surprises. Credit card statements also document lifestyle spending, which can be relevant to alimony calculations and may reveal undisclosed spending.
7. Business Documents (If Either Spouse Is Self-Employed)
If you or your spouse owns a business or is self-employed, the financial disclosure requirements expand significantly. Gather: business tax returns for the past three years, profit and loss statements, business bank account statements, and any partnership or shareholder agreements.
Why it matters: Self-employment income is the area most prone to underreporting and manipulation in divorce proceedings. Courts often look at business finances closely, and business valuation may be required if the business was started or grew during the marriage. This is one area where a forensic accountant can pay for themselves many times over.
8. Life Insurance Policy Statements
Collect current statements for any life insurance policies — term life or permanent (whole, universal, variable). For permanent policies, you want the statement showing the current cash value.
Why it matters: Term life policies have no cash value but are relevant to beneficiary designations (which you'll want to update post-divorce). Permanent life insurance policies accumulate cash value that may be marital property subject to division. They also matter in the context of child support — Florida courts can require a parent to maintain life insurance to secure support obligations.
9. Property Deeds and Vehicle Titles
Gather deeds to any real property (your primary residence, vacation homes, rental properties, vacant land) and titles to all vehicles — cars, trucks, boats, RVs, motorcycles. Note whether each is titled jointly or in one spouse's name.
Why it matters: The title on a property doesn't always determine how it's treated in a Florida divorce — marital funds used to purchase or improve a property can make it marital property even if one spouse's name is on the title. Understanding what you own and how it's titled is foundational to any asset division conversation.
A Few Additional Documents Worth Gathering
- Investment account statements (brokerage, mutual fund accounts)
- Health insurance documentation (costs matter for both alimony and child support calculations)
- Prenuptial or postnuptial agreement, if one exists
- Any prior court orders (child support, alimony from a prior marriage)
- Social Security statements (relevant for long marriages near retirement age)
Organize Early, Secure Copies
Once you've gathered these documents, store digital copies somewhere your spouse cannot access — a personal email, cloud storage account, or USB drive. Many people discover after filing that they've lost access to joint online accounts. Getting copies now is simply prudent preparation, regardless of how the process unfolds.
The 45-day disclosure deadline runs from the date your spouse is served — not when you file. If you're the petitioner, you're on the clock the moment your spouse receives the papers. Starting this list today gives you a meaningful head start.
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