Use case

Business valuation in divorce proceedings.

A business owned by one or both spouses is often the largest marital asset. Its valuation affects settlement negotiations, court proceedings, and post-divorce financial stability. We’re clear about where a Valuion report helps – and where you need a named forensic valuer instead.

Where a Valuion report fits

Divorce proceedings involving a business typically fall into one of three patterns, each with different valuation requirements.

Uncontested settlements between spouses who both understand the business. This is the most common scenario for SME owners and where a Valuion report works best. Both spouses need a defensible, methodology-grounded reference number to negotiate against. The Detailed report provides exactly this.

Settlements facilitated by solicitors or mediators, where the business owner wants to arrive at the mediation with a defensible starting point. Our report anchors the discussion; the mediator or solicitor guides negotiation from there. Many family law solicitors explicitly welcome a pre-mediation valuation as it reduces disputed territory.

Contested court proceedings requiring expert witness testimony. This is where Valuion does not fit. Court proceedings involving cross-examination require a named forensic valuer with professional indemnity insurance, qualified to stand behind a sworn valuation. We are clear about this and will recommend you engage a forensic valuer if your case is heading to contested proceedings.

Jurisdiction-specific family court standards

Family court standards for business valuation vary meaningfully across jurisdictions. Use this as a guide; specific legal advice requires a local family law solicitor.

  • England & Wales: In Financial Remedy Proceedings, the court prefers a Single Joint Expert appointment. A Valuion report is often helpful pre-appointment but the Single Joint Expert’s valuation is the binding number.
  • Ireland: The Circuit Court and High Court similarly favour jointly-instructed experts for contested valuations. For mediated settlements, a Valuion report carries weight as a reasonable starting point.
  • United States: State law varies. California and most community-property states require a formal business valuation for contested cases. New York, Texas, and Florida have similar requirements, typically by a Certified Valuation Analyst or ASA-accredited valuer.
  • Canada: The Chartered Business Valuator (CBV) designation is the standard for contested proceedings.
  • Australia: The Family Court typically requires a Registered Business Valuer for contested matters.
  • New Zealand: Similar to Australia; formal valuations by accredited practitioners are expected in contested cases.

How to use the report productively

The productive sequence in a divorce scenario:

  1. Both spouses get the report in advance of mediation. Share the methodology so neither feels the other is hiding assumptions. This is a common request from mediators.
  2. Focus on the range, not the midpoint. A Valuion report delivers a range (e.g. $1.2M–$1.8M). Spouses negotiate within that range based on other settlement factors (other assets, care arrangements, future earnings).
  3. Use the 8-driver assessment to explain why the business is worth what it’s worth. If one spouse wasn’t involved in the business, the driver-by-driver walkthrough helps explain value without requiring financial expertise.
  4. Stop if the case becomes contested. If mediation fails and the matter is heading to court, retain a forensic valuer in your jurisdiction and treat the Valuion report as preliminary work only.

Frequently asked

Questions about using Valuion for divorce settlement

Only for uncontested matters where both parties agree it represents a fair starting point. In contested proceedings with cross-examination, our report does not meet the standard for expert-witness testimony. You’ll need a named forensic valuer with professional indemnity insurance, qualified to defend the valuation under cross-examination.
This is a reasonable concern. Our Detailed report uses a deterministic pipeline, not speculative language generation. Every number has explicit working. You can share the report alongside the methodology page so your spouse or their solicitor can verify each calculation. If the objection persists, engaging a jointly-instructed qualified valuer may be the cleaner path.
No. A Valuion report values what the business shows on paper. If one spouse believes the business is under-reporting income or hiding cash flows (the “lifestyle business” problem), you need a forensic accountant to reconstruct accurate financials first. Our report is only as accurate as the financials you enter.
For mediated settlements: either approach works. Some spouses get separate reports and compare; others agree on a joint one. The joint approach signals good faith and reduces expense.
Courts often require valuation “as of” the date of separation or filing, not today. Our Detailed report uses current financials and current market multiples, so it values the business as of the report date. Retrospective valuations require a qualified valuer with access to historical multiple data for the relevant date.

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