Marital Domestic Separation and Property Settlement Agreement Minor Children no Joint Property or Debts where Divorce Action Filed - Nevada 2025

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Assets incurred before marriage or after separation are deemed separate assets. If you already owned property prior to marriage (or premarital) and it stays in your name alone, it will remain yours after divorce.
What are the grounds for divorce in Nevada? The parties are incompatible; or Insanity for two years prior to the action; or Spouses living separate and apart for more than one year. Note: it is not necessary to make or prove allegations of adultery, mental cruelty, etc. to obtain a divorce in Nevada.
A settlement agreement differs from a separation agreement as it sets the terms for the divorce, not the separation. A settlement agreement should address all central issues of the divorce. This can include things like division of marital assets and debts, child custody, and child support, as well as spousal support.
Nevada is one of nine states where a community property system of asset division is used, which means that anything acquired during the marriage will be divided 50-50 upon divorce. There are rare exceptions, but generally, the equal distribution is the result.
Nevada is a community property state. This means that each spouse owns 50% of the property assets and debts acquired during the marriage. Upon divorce or legal separation, courts distribute these assets and debts equally between the spouses.
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In Nevada, marital property is any property or debt that was acquired during the marriage. This means that even if one party earned the money or purchased the property, it is still considered marital property and subject to division in a divorce.
Separate property generally cannot be touched in a divorce., but there may be times when separate property turns into marital property, making it available for distribution.

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