Can I Afford Divorce Calculator

Assess your financial readiness to proceed with divorce — including savings coverage, post-divorce monthly budget, and emergency fund preparation.

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Use the Divorce Cost Calculator
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Separate from divorce funds
Financial Readiness Score
67/100 — Mostly Ready
Income Stability
25/25
Savings Coverage
30/30
Debt Situation
8/20
Emergency Buffer
4/25
You have a reasonable foundation but consider building savings further before filing. Focus on reducing credit card debt and building your emergency fund.
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Advanced Calculator

Financial readiness score with gauge visualization, category-by-category breakdown chart covering emergency fund, cash flow, divorce coverage, DTI, and credit.

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64/100
Moderate Risk
Financial Readiness Score
Emergency Fund40/100
2.6 months of expenses covered (target: 6+ months)
Monthly Cash Flow60/100
Post-divorce monthly surplus: $500
Divorce Cost Coverage60/100
Savings cover 80% of estimated divorce cost
Debt-to-Income100/100
DTI ratio: 7% (target: under 25%)
Credit Readiness60/100
Credit score 680 — may qualify for most rentals
Emergency Fund: 2.6 months of expenses covered (target: 6+ months)
Monthly Cash Flow: Post-divorce monthly surplus: $500
Divorce Cost Coverage: Savings cover 80% of estimated divorce cost
Credit Readiness: Credit score 680 — may qualify for most rentals
Professional Simulator

Full 12-month financial runway with monthly cash flow chart, housing transition cost modeling, and credit score impact projection with recovery timeline.

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12-Month Financial Runway
+$700/mo
Total Monthly Income$5,500
Total Monthly Expenses$4,800
Divorce Spread Over3 months
Housing Cost Increase$700/mo
12-Month Net$6,600
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How the Divorce Affordability Calculator Works

Divorce is expensive — but the cost of staying in an unhappy or unhealthy marriage can be far higher. This calculator helps you assess your true financial readiness across three dimensions: overall financial stability, post-divorce monthly budget viability, and emergency fund preparation.

Why financial preparation matters

Many people proceed with divorce without adequate financial preparation and end up in a far worse financial position than necessary. Common mistakes include: depleting all savings on legal fees and having no emergency buffer, underestimating the cost of establishing a new household, and not accounting for the loss of a second income for shared expenses.

The three readiness dimensions

Financial Readiness Formula

Readiness Score (0–100) = Income Stability Score (0–25) + Savings Coverage Score (0–30) + Debt Score (0–20) + Emergency Buffer Score (0–25) Monthly Net = Monthly Income − Total Monthly Expenses Expense Ratio = (Total Expenses / Income) × 100 Emergency Gap = (Monthly Expenses × Target Months + Divorce Cost) − Current Savings Months to Ready = Emergency Gap / Monthly Savings Capacity

Real-World Example

Case Study — Two Different Situations

Two people considering divorce — different financial situations, very different readiness levels.

Person A: $7,500/mo income, $25,000 savings, stable jobScore: 82/100
Person B: $4,200/mo income, $3,000 savings, variable incomeScore: 31/100
Person A: Monthly surplus post-divorce+$1,850/mo
Person B: Monthly deficit post-divorce-$420/mo

Person A is well-positioned to proceed. Person B is advised to spend 12–18 months stabilizing income, building savings, and negotiating a longer timeline — if circumstances permit — before filing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Safety always comes first — if you are in danger, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline (1-800-799-7233). For financial constraints, options include: legal aid organizations that provide free or low-cost divorce help, pro bono attorney services, self-help legal centers at courthouses, fee waivers for court filing costs, and legal clinics at law schools. A DIY divorce with court-provided forms costs as little as $150–$450 in filing fees.
A general guideline: have savings equal to your estimated divorce cost plus 3–6 months of your solo living expenses. For an uncontested divorce costing $5,000 with monthly expenses of $4,000, that means $17,000–$29,000 in liquid savings before filing. This provides a buffer for unexpected costs and the transition to single-income life.
If you are currently a stay-at-home spouse or have limited income, getting employment before filing strengthens your financial position significantly — both for affording the process and for establishing post-divorce independence. However, it can also affect spousal support calculations, so discuss the timing with an attorney if support will be a major issue in your case.
Generally yes — attorney fees and divorce costs are commonly paid from marital assets, and this is often acceptable to courts. However, large withdrawals or liquidations from marital accounts immediately before filing can be viewed negatively (as dissipation of assets). Keep records of what you spend and why, and avoid any transfers that could appear as hiding or misusing marital funds.
Hidden costs include: security deposits and moving costs for new housing, establishing new utility accounts, replacing shared household items, higher insurance rates as a single person, loss of employer benefits through a spouse (health insurance), tax filing status change (lose married filing jointly bracket), and the psychological cost of stress affecting work productivity. These can add $10,000–$25,000 beyond the direct legal costs.

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