Kentucky
I have a rather unique case I suppose. My wife/ex decided to go through a self-help packet to process our divorce, since we get along well enough to do so. We've managed everything, but I'm a little hung up on what to do with the house. I have children from my marriage before her, so I stayed in the home we'd bought together. We lived in that home for exactly 1 year prior to her moving out (May 2016 to May 2017 is when she resided there). Normally, I know it's a good option to sell the home and split the profit, however, I didn't want to drag the kids through more than they had to be dragged through. That, and since we were 1 year in, there was likely no profit to be had from selling anyway.
She went ahead and signed a quit claim deed, and she was never on the mortgage/loan at all. I'm wanting to make sure she gets her fair share though, so I'm trying to decide what to do. We paid a 3.5% down payment on the home (FHA), plus a few thousand in closing costs, price of inspection, appraisal, etc. It totaled about $12K I think. I've played with a couple options:
- She gets 3% of the home value when I eventually sell it, regardless of when that is, or, on my next appraisal I simply pay her that out of pocket. I get the 3% number from the total amount we used from savings to get into the home, and principle paid for that first year in the house, totaled together, taken as a percentage of the home value when we bought it (which is about 6%) and then dividing that in half
- Alternatively, I've considered just giving her half of the $12K, plus half of the principle paid in that 1 year, when the house sells, plus some interest amount that's added on top of that. In other words if I were to pay her today, I'd pay $6K + 50% of principle balance 1 year in. But if I wait until the house sells some day (could be years) I need to take on some additional interest on that amount to make up for time. In other words it's akin to me having a loan out from her
Any thoughts on how we can handle this? I want to be as fair to her as possible. I have no intentions of screwing her out of her part in something she helped buy.
Thanks in advance!
I have a rather unique case I suppose. My wife/ex decided to go through a self-help packet to process our divorce, since we get along well enough to do so. We've managed everything, but I'm a little hung up on what to do with the house. I have children from my marriage before her, so I stayed in the home we'd bought together. We lived in that home for exactly 1 year prior to her moving out (May 2016 to May 2017 is when she resided there). Normally, I know it's a good option to sell the home and split the profit, however, I didn't want to drag the kids through more than they had to be dragged through. That, and since we were 1 year in, there was likely no profit to be had from selling anyway.
She went ahead and signed a quit claim deed, and she was never on the mortgage/loan at all. I'm wanting to make sure she gets her fair share though, so I'm trying to decide what to do. We paid a 3.5% down payment on the home (FHA), plus a few thousand in closing costs, price of inspection, appraisal, etc. It totaled about $12K I think. I've played with a couple options:
- She gets 3% of the home value when I eventually sell it, regardless of when that is, or, on my next appraisal I simply pay her that out of pocket. I get the 3% number from the total amount we used from savings to get into the home, and principle paid for that first year in the house, totaled together, taken as a percentage of the home value when we bought it (which is about 6%) and then dividing that in half
- Alternatively, I've considered just giving her half of the $12K, plus half of the principle paid in that 1 year, when the house sells, plus some interest amount that's added on top of that. In other words if I were to pay her today, I'd pay $6K + 50% of principle balance 1 year in. But if I wait until the house sells some day (could be years) I need to take on some additional interest on that amount to make up for time. In other words it's akin to me having a loan out from her
Any thoughts on how we can handle this? I want to be as fair to her as possible. I have no intentions of screwing her out of her part in something she helped buy.
Thanks in advance!