Divorce Financial Settlement Solicitors in Cardiff.
Dividing money, property and pensions on divorce in Cardiff? Our family team helps you reach a fair, final financial settlement, by agreement where possible, through the Cardiff family court where needed, with a clear written estimate from the outset.
Financial settlements from our Cardiff office
If you need help with a divorce financial settlement in Cardiff, our family team acts for people across the city, the Vale and the South Wales valleys. How a settlement is decided, the law, the factors the court weighs, consent orders and clean breaks, is set out in full on our financial settlements page. This page covers the local picture: where cases are heard, how an agreement is made binding, and how we work with you.
Where are financial cases heard in Cardiff?
Most financial settlements are agreed without a final hearing, and that is almost always the calmer, cheaper route. Where a hearing is needed, financial remedy cases for Cardiff and the surrounding authorities are dealt with at the Cardiff Civil and Family Justice Centre on Park Street, close to Cardiff Central. The process is built to encourage settlement: a first appointment and a financial dispute resolution hearing come before any final hearing, and most cases resolve along the way. Hearings can be held in Welsh on request.
How does the agreement become binding?
Reaching agreement is only half the job. A written agreement on its own is not enforceable, to give it legal force, we draft a consent order and lodge it at the court for a judge to approve. Once approved, it is binding and brings the financial chapter to a close. If your divorce is ongoing, our divorce solicitors in Cardiff page explains how the two run side by side.
How our Cardiff family team helps
We advise on settlements both straightforward and complex from our Cardiff office, and we are realistic about the likely outcome rather than promising the world. We keep sight of what matters: a fair result you can move on from, and an order that protects you for the future. We charge by the hour and give you a written estimate at the outset; any court fees are set by the government and separate from our costs.
Robertsons Solicitors in Cardiff
Find us: 6 Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3RS
Call Cardiff: 029 2023 7777
Tell us your access needs and we’ll do what we can to accommodate you.
Full Cardiff office details & directions →We aim for a fair settlement that actually holds, agreed where we can, argued properly where we can't, for clients across Cardiff.
Our approachClear advice. Practical next steps.
Every financial settlements matter is different. We start by understanding your situation before we recommend an approach.
We won't push you toward a process that doesn't fit. We won't drag things out. And we'll always tell you what something will cost before we start it.
- A dedicated specialist for your matter, backed by the wider Robertsons family law team
- Transparent pricing — clear written costs before any work begins
- Plain-English advice — no jargon, no surprises
- Offices across South Wales and the South West
Real stories from real clients
“From day one of our public law children case, Rebecca Baker did not rest until I got the outcome I wanted, and even secured protective orders to safeguard my family. Professional and efficient.”Bilal Care proceedings
“Highly recommend Robertsons solicitors, especially Rebecca Baker - she's one in a million. Helped and supported me through my family matter. 10/10 solicitors.”Leah Family law
“Rebecca was absolutely amazing. She was in constant communication which made the whole process much easier during a difficult time. I would highly recommend Robertsons Solicitors.”Jordan Aimee Family law
Who would be looking after you?
Some of your financial settlements team at Robertsons.
Amy Lewis
Amy is a Family Law solicitor. She advises on divorce and separation, child arrangements and financial settlements, bringing a calm and empathetic approach to clients navigating some of the most difficult periods of their lives.
View profileBabar Khan
Babar is a Trainee Solicitor in the Family Department, gaining experience across divorce, financial remedies and children matters. Before his training contract he worked as a paralegal in the firm's Secured Lending and Debt Recovery teams, and previously advised on civil, consumer and property disputes as a Legal Advisor
View profileChris Barber
Chris is the Managing Director of Robertsons Solicitors and works alongside the Family Law team. He specialises in complex financial settlements, cohabitation disputes and children matters. Recognised in The Legal 500, he is known for his calm, personable approach and his ability to remove the complexity from difficult situations.
View profileHannah Magee
Hannah is a Director and heads the Family Law team. She specialises in complex divorce and high-net-worth financial cases, including matters involving trusts, businesses and international assets. Ranked in Chambers & Partners and The Legal 500, she is known for her calm, thorough and client-focused approach.
View profileQuestions clients ask us about financial settlements
Once approved as a court order, a financial settlement is intended to be final and is difficult to change. There are limited grounds on which a court will set aside or vary an order: where one party fraudulently concealed assets, where there has been a fundamental change in circumstances that was not foreseeable at the time (known as a Barder event), or in relation to maintenance orders where circumstances have genuinely changed. Simply regretting the terms agreed, or a change in financial fortunes that was foreseeable, is not sufficient. This is why getting the settlement right first time — with proper legal advice — matters so much.
Pre-marital assets and inheritances are not automatically excluded from a divorce settlement, but they are given weight — particularly in shorter marriages. The longer the marriage, and the more those assets have been mixed with matrimonial finances (for example, used to buy the family home or fund joint expenditure), the harder they are to ring-fence. In shorter marriages, or where inherited assets have been kept strictly separate, a court may treat them as non-matrimonial and exclude them from the pot. A prenuptial agreement, if properly made, can provide stronger protection — but it must meet specific requirements to be given full weight by a court.
Pensions must be considered in every divorce — ignoring them can leave one spouse significantly worse off in retirement. There are three main approaches: a pension sharing order transfers a percentage of one spouse's pension fund into a new or existing pension in the other's name, providing a clean break; pension attachment (earmarking) redirects future pension income or lump sums to the other spouse when they fall due, but remains linked to the other person's pension; offsetting allows one spouse to keep the pension while the other receives a greater share of another asset, such as the family home. Comparing pension values fairly usually requires a report from a pension actuary.
Courts in England and Wales do not apply a rigid formula — they exercise discretion guided by a checklist of factors set out in the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. These include the length of the marriage, each spouse's income, earning capacity, and financial needs, the standard of living during the marriage, contributions made by each party (including non-financial contributions such as childcare), any physical or mental disability, and the welfare of any children. The starting point in long marriages is often an equal division, but the court will depart from equality where fairness requires it. Meeting each party's needs — particularly housing and income — is usually the first priority.
The family home is usually the most significant asset and is dealt with as part of the overall financial settlement. Common outcomes include one spouse buying the other out and remaining in the property, a sale with the proceeds divided between the parties, or a Mesher order — a deferred sale arrangement that allows the main carer and children to remain in the home until a trigger event (such as the youngest child turning 18 or the resident spouse remarrying), at which point the property is sold and proceeds divided. The right outcome depends on the overall financial picture, each party's housing needs, and the welfare of any children.
Yes — without a court order, financial claims between former spouses do not expire on divorce. A former spouse can bring a financial claim against you many years after the divorce, including against assets you have built up since the marriage ended. There are well-known cases of claims being brought decades later. The only reliable way to end financial claims permanently is through a court order — either a consent order if you agree, or a financial remedy order imposed by the court. This is why obtaining a financial order at the time of divorce, even where finances are modest, is strongly advisable.
All assets owned by either spouse are potentially in scope — regardless of whose name they are in. This includes the family home and any other property, savings and bank accounts, investments and shares, pensions (often the most significant asset after property), business interests, vehicles, and valuable personal possessions. Inherited assets and pre-marital wealth may be treated differently, particularly in shorter marriages, but they are not automatically excluded. Both spouses are required to give full financial disclosure of all assets, income, and liabilities — concealing or understating assets is a serious matter that can lead to a settlement being set aside.
Debts are treated as liabilities of the estate and form part of the overall financial picture — the court considers both assets and liabilities when deciding a fair settlement. Joint debts remain the responsibility of both parties regardless of what a private agreement says: if your name is on a joint mortgage or loan and your former spouse fails to pay, the lender can pursue you. A financial settlement should deal with how joint debts are to be repaid or refinanced, and where possible remove one party's name from joint obligations. A court order between the parties does not bind third-party creditors — only the lender's consent achieves that.
Concealing or misrepresenting assets in financial proceedings is a contempt of court and can have serious consequences. If you suspect your spouse is not being honest, there are several tools available: a solicitor can send formal questionnaires requiring explanation of financial documents, the court can order third parties (such as banks or employers) to provide information, and in some cases a forensic accountant can be instructed to investigate. If hidden assets are discovered after a settlement has been reached, the court can set the order aside and reopen the case. Acting on suspicion early — before agreeing any settlement — is far more effective than trying to unwind one afterwards.
A clean break order ends all financial claims between spouses immediately and permanently — neither can make any future claim against the other for income or capital. It provides certainty and allows both parties to move on financially without ongoing ties. A clean break is not always achievable: where one spouse is financially dependent and cannot become self-sufficient, the court may order ongoing maintenance instead. Clean breaks are more common in shorter marriages without children, or where both parties have similar earning capacity. Even where ongoing maintenance is ordered, a deferred clean break — set to take effect at a future date — may be possible.
A consent order is a financial settlement that both spouses have agreed and which is then approved by the court, making it legally binding. The court does not automatically scrutinise the terms in detail — it checks that the agreement is broadly fair and that both parties have had proper legal advice. To obtain one, both parties must provide a summary of their financial positions alongside the draft order. A consent order provides finality: once approved, it prevents either party from bringing further financial claims. Without court approval, even a written agreement signed by both parties is not fully binding and can be revisited.
A financial remedy order is a court order that determines the financial settlement where the parties cannot reach agreement themselves. The process begins with both parties filing a Form E (full financial disclosure), followed by a first appointment hearing, a financial dispute resolution (FDR) hearing — which is a structured negotiation meeting — and if agreement is still not reached, a final hearing where a judge decides. Most cases settle before a final hearing, often at the FDR stage. Financial remedy proceedings can take twelve to eighteen months or longer. Court is a last resort — the cost, delay, and uncertainty of litigation make negotiated settlement significantly preferable where possible.
A financial settlement is a legally binding agreement that resolves all financial claims between divorcing spouses — covering property, savings, pensions, investments, debts, and maintenance. Divorce itself does not end financial claims: without a court order, a former spouse can make financial claims against you at any point in the future, including against assets you acquire after the marriage ends. A financial settlement, once approved by the court as a consent order or imposed as a financial remedy order, provides a clean legal break and prevents future claims. It is one of the most important steps in any divorce — and one of the most commonly overlooked.
Form E is the standard financial disclosure document used in divorce financial proceedings. Both parties must complete it fully and honestly, setting out all assets, income, liabilities, pensions, business interests, and financial needs — supported by documentary evidence such as bank statements, mortgage statements, pension valuations, and payslips. The duty of disclosure is ongoing: if your financial position changes during proceedings, you must update the information. Providing false or incomplete information is a contempt of court and can result in a settlement being set aside. Form E is long and detailed — many people find completing it accurately and comprehensively more demanding than they expected.
Have a question that isn't covered here? Speak to one of our financial settlements specialists directly.
Practical advice you can read at your own pace
How Are Pensions Dealt With in a Divorce Settlement?
Pensions are often one of the largest assets in a divorce — sometimes worth more than the home — yet they are easily overlooked. They can be shared, offset against other assets, or made subject to…
What Is Spousal Maintenance and When Is It Awarded?
Spousal maintenance is regular financial support paid by one former spouse or civil partner to the other after divorce. It is separate from child maintenance and is awarded where one person cannot…
Across South Wales and the South West
Cardiff
6 Park Place, Cardiff, CF10 3RS
029 2023 7777
Visit office pageSwansea
Princess Quarter, 18 Princess Way, Swansea, SA1 3LW
01792 720 721
Visit office pageBarry
6 St Nicholas Road, Barry, CF62 6QW
01446 745 660
Visit office pageBristol
Trym Lodge,1 Henbury Road, Westbury-On-Trym, Bristol, BS9 3HQ
Appointment only0117 325 9545
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8a Pentonville, Newport, NP20 5HB
Appointment only01633 742 741
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