Division of Assets, Property Settlement and ANOTHER BFA

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evea8571

Well-Known Member
16 January 2022
21
0
121
Hi All,

Me and the wife have been married for over 10 years. It is looking like we are going to separate. I have a house overseas I’ve had for 25 years and (which means had 15 years prior to marrying her) that she has not contributed to. I have a BFA in place to protect this asset. The BFA essentially says everything we have will be split 50/50 except the house overseas – so it is effectively out of the asset pool. We have 8-year-old son which is also disclosed in the BFA.

When talking to her about separating she is claiming she will not challenge the BFA or play any games. Without going into detail, I cannot take her word for it as she has been very deceitful in the past and has broken my trust many times (one of the reasons we are separating). I told my lawyers about us likely separating (the same ones who did the BFA) and they have advised that I need to do a “division of assets” and ANOTHER more updated BFA. From my own research I don’t think I need another BFA because nothing has changed and it is still very recent. I am unsure if he is just trying to get some more money out of me. My understanding is that if it is binding and no “material changes” have happened then the existing one is fine. For the record, I REALLY researched this at the time, and I know what constitutes to a material change – we have had no additional kids, no new assets, no health changes and no change of wages. Therefore, there is nothing to update in the BFA so I’d imagine another one isn’t required?

Then there is the division of assets. I can’t find a definitive answer. When you hear the phrase “settle of court” we usually mean not going to court, but do you still have to sign some legal paperwork for the property settlement? The lawyer is telling me that the property settlement HAS to be done by lawyer. I would have thought that if it is amicable and there is no disagreement then you can just settle without lawyers and do it at a court. What I am getting at here is if we are amicable what is the solution that is least costly to me but still legally binding? I am having to explore this because my wife is insisting none of this is necessary and we don’t even have to sign anything. This doesn’t seem right to me, and I am very suspicious of it, I think she is just trying to wait out the BFA and challenge maybe a year down the line.

So, to summarise my questions one last time:
Is another BFA required?
How do we property settle, can we do it without even signing anything, so just verbally so to speak?
If we must sign paperwork, can we do this at a court ourselves without involving lawyers and what is the process? Or do the lawyers genuinely need to prepare a “division of assets”?

Thanks
 

Noel Harris

Well-Known Member
30 April 2026
41
0
121
Hi there,

Do you need a new BFA?

You may be right that "no material change" means the existing BFA still stands but that's a legal conclusion, not just a checklist, and only a lawyer who's seen the actual document can properly confirm it. Rather than assuming it's about fees, ask your lawyer to explain in plain terms exactly what specific risk an update would address.

Can you settle informally?

I'd be cautious here. Even if things are amicable now, a verbal or informal understanding isn't legally binding or enforceable, if she changes her mind later, there's nothing stopping a claim. To make it stick, you generally need either:
  1. An updated BFA (private, no court, but both parties need independent legal advice), or
  2. Consent Orders (filed with the court for approval, no need to attend in person, but the paperwork must properly set out the asset pool).
There's no "sign nothing" option that's actually binding, that gap is exactly where the risk you're worried about sits.

Given the overseas property and BFA interaction, it's worth getting a clear cost comparison between the two options rather than guessing. Our team handles exactly this kind of property settlement and asset division work if you'd like a second opinion before spending money on something you may not need.

Disclaimer: Please note information in this response is general in nature and should not be treated as legal advice. It may not be complete or up to date for your specific situation. Independent legal advice is always recommended.