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Pennsylvania Family Law Tool

Equitable Distribution Worksheet

Inventory the assets and debts of your marital estate, characterize each as marital, separate, or partial, and total what's subject to equitable distribution under Pennsylvania law. This is a planning tool — not a final determination of how property will be divided.

How to use this worksheet. Add each significant asset and debt of the marriage. For each item, enter a description, the current fair market value (or balance for a debt), and characterize it as marital, separate, or mixed. The worksheet totals the marital estate at the bottom. Your work is saved in this browser session only — print or export when finished.

Real Estate

Description
Value
Character

Bank & Investment Accounts

Description
Balance
Character

Retirement & Pension Accounts

Description
Value
Character

Vehicles

Description
Value
Character

Business Interests

Description
Value
Character

Other Assets (jewelry, collectibles, etc.)

Description
Value
Character

Debts & Liabilities

Description (mortgage, auto loan, credit card, etc.)
Balance
Character

Marital Estate Summary

Marital Assets

Real Estate$0.00
Bank & Investments$0.00
Retirement$0.00
Vehicles$0.00
Business$0.00
Other$0.00
Total Marital Assets$0.00

Marital Debts & Net Estate

Total Marital Debts$0.00
Net Marital Estate$0.00
Separate Assets (excluded)$0.00
Mixed Assets (review needed)$0.00

How Equitable Distribution Works in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania is an equitable distribution state, not a community property state. The court does not automatically split marital property 50/50. Instead, the court divides the marital estate equitably — meaning fairly — based on eleven statutory factors at 23 Pa.C.S. §3502. Equitable distribution is the financial heart of a Pennsylvania divorce, and most contested matters are won or lost on the asset characterization and tracing work that happens before conciliation.

What's Marital, What's Separate

Pennsylvania law distinguishes between marital property (subject to equitable distribution) and separate property (excluded from the marital estate):

The Eleven §3502 Factors

Once the marital estate is identified, the court divides it using these factors:

  1. Length of the marriage
  2. Prior marriages of either party
  3. Age, health, station, amount and sources of income, vocational skills, employability, estate, liabilities, and needs of each party
  4. Contribution to the education, training, or increased earning power of the other party
  5. Opportunity of each party for future acquisitions of capital assets and income
  6. Sources of income of both parties, including but not limited to medical, retirement, insurance, or other benefits
  7. Contribution or dissipation of each party in the acquisition, preservation, depreciation, or appreciation of marital property, including a homemaker's contribution
  8. The value of property set apart to each party
  9. Standard of living established during the marriage
  10. Economic circumstances of each party at the time the division is to become effective
  11. Federal, state, and local tax ramifications and expense of sale, transfer, or liquidation

The factors are weighted by the court based on the specific facts of each marriage. There is no formula. A 30-year marriage where one spouse stayed home raising children may produce a very different division than a 5-year marriage with two career professionals — even with similar asset totals.

Valuation Date vs. Date of Separation

An important nuance: the date of separation generally fixes what counts as marital (acquisition cutoff), but the date of distribution generally fixes what each item is worth (valuation cutoff). An asset that existed at the date of separation but appreciated since then has both characterization and valuation aspects to address.

What This Worksheet Cannot Do

This worksheet helps you inventory and characterize. It does not:

For matters with significant assets, business interests, retirement accounts requiring QDROs, or contested characterization, counsel review of your worksheet is the appropriate next step.

Important — Read This

This worksheet provides general information and an organizational framework only. It does not constitute legal advice and does not establish an attorney-client relationship. Property characterization (marital, separate, or mixed) involves legal analysis specific to each asset's history. Valuation, tax consequences, dissipation claims, and the application of the §3502 factors all require counsel review. Before relying on any totals from this worksheet for negotiation, settlement, or filing decisions, consult with a licensed Pennsylvania family law attorney about your specific matter. Data entered on this page is stored only in your browser session — close the tab and the data is gone unless you printed or saved a copy.

This tool is provided "as is" for educational and informational purposes only. The Law Offices of Scott L. Levine, LLC makes no warranties — express, implied, or otherwise — regarding the accuracy, completeness, or applicability of any output to any specific case. Use of this tool does not constitute legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. No user should rely on the output to make legal, financial, or strategic decisions without independent review by a licensed Pennsylvania attorney familiar with the specific facts of the matter.

Need Help With Your Marital Estate?

Equitable distribution is where most Pennsylvania divorces actually settle or fight. Preparation of your inventory and characterization is the work that drives the result. The first call is free.

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