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How a Divorce Settlement Is Structured When There Are Children, Property and Business Interests in South Africa

By Mandy Simpson
– posted 2 hours ago

When a marriage ends and the separating couple has minor children, immovable property, pension entitlements and one or more business interests at stake, the divorce settlement becomes a multi-layered negotiation that must satisfy both the court and the Family Advocate before it can be made an order. Understanding how a divorce settlement is structured when there are children, property and business interests is essential for any spouse, or adviser, who wants to avoid costly litigation and reach a durable agreement. At Mandy Simpson Attorneys, I guide clients through exactly this process on a daily basis, and in my experience the single biggest mistake divorcing spouses make is failing to gather full financial disclosure before they begin negotiating.

This guide consolidates every pillar of a complex South African divorce settlement into one practical resource: parenting plans, maintenance, matrimonial property regimes, business valuations, pensions, tax and the mechanics of converting an agreement into a court order.

Quick checklist, the five pillars of a complex divorce settlement:

    • Child arrangements. Parenting plan, primary residence, contact schedule, guardianship and the Family Advocate’s recommendation.
    • Maintenance. Child maintenance obligations and, where applicable, spousal (rehabilitative or permanent) maintenance.
    • Property and asset division. Division according to the applicable matrimonial property regime, including the family home, vehicles, investments and personal assets.
    • Business interests. Independent valuation, buy-out mechanics, share transfers and shareholder-agreement implications.
    • Tax consequences. Capital Gains Tax, donations tax, VAT and pension-transfer treatment, each of which can erode the value of any agreed split if ignored.

    Disclaimer: This article provides general legal information relevant to South African law as at July 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Individual circumstances vary, and readers should consult a qualified family-law practitioner before acting on any of the information below.

Legal Framework and Key Statutes Governing Divorce Settlements in South Africa

The Divorce Act 70 of 1979, grounds and procedure

The Divorce Act 70 of 1979 remains the primary statute governing the dissolution of civil marriages. It provides for divorce on the ground of irretrievable breakdown of the marriage (section 4) or the mental illness or continuous unconsciousness of a party (section 5). Importantly, section 7 of the Divorce Act empowers the court to make orders regarding the division of assets, maintenance and forfeiture of patrimonial benefits, but generally only within the parameters set by the parties’ matrimonial property regime and any settlement agreement placed before the court. Section 7(3) allows a spouse to claim a redistribution of assets despite being married out of community of property where the sharing in a joint estate is expressly excluded. Such a redistribution is available on the basis of the claimant spouse having contributed, directly or indirectly, to the spouse from which the redistribution is being claimed.

The Children’s Act 38 of 2005, the best-interests standard

Any divorce settlement that involves minor or dependent children must comply with the Children’s Act 38 of 2005. Section 7 sets out a detailed list of factors the court must weigh when determining the best interests of the child, including the child’s age, maturity, emotional and developmental needs, the capacity of each parent, and, critically, the child’s own views, where the child is of sufficient maturity. In practice, no consent paper dealing with children will be made an order of court unless the Family Advocate has had an opportunity to comment.

Matrimonial property regimes, the starting point for asset division

How property is divided depends almost entirely on the matrimonial property regime that governed the marriage. The Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984 distinguishes between marriages in community of property (the default where no antenuptial contract was registered), out of community of property with the accrual system and out of community of property without accrual. I address each regime in detail in the property-division section below, but the key point is this: identifying and confirming the regime must be the very first step in any settlement negotiation.

Parenting Arrangements and the Family Advocate Process, Divorce Settlement Children South Africa

Guardianship, custody, contact and shared residency

Since the Children’s Act replaced much of the outdated “custody and access” terminology, South African family law now speaks of parental responsibilities and rights, including care (day-to-day residence), contact (time spent with the non-resident parent) and guardianship (major decisions about the child’s education, medical care and property). Both parents remain co-guardians after divorce unless a court orders otherwise.

Shared or co-primary residence arrangements are increasingly accepted. Courts have recognised that, where both parents are capable and willing and the logistics are workable, a shared-residency arrangement can serve the child’s best interests. In my practice, I find that a well-drafted week-on/week-off or 5-2-2-5 rotating schedule works well for school-age children, provided the parents live in reasonable proximity and can communicate constructively.

Parenting plan: what to include

A comprehensive parenting plan, which becomes annexure to the settlement agreement and is then made an order of court, should cover the following:

  • Day-to-day residence. Where the child sleeps each night during term time and weekends.
  • Holiday and public-holiday schedule. Rotation over school holidays, religious holidays and long weekends.
  • Education decisions. Which parent consults on school choice, extracurricular activities and tutoring.
  • Medical decisions. Consent protocols for elective procedures and emergency treatment.
  • Communication. Minimum phone or video-call schedule when the child is with the other parent.
  • Relocation. A clause requiring written consent or court approval before either parent relocates beyond a specified radius.
  • Dispute escalation. A step-by-step process, informal discussion, mediation, then court, for resolving future disagreements about the plan.

An example two-week rotating schedule might assign Week 1 Monday to Friday with Parent A and the weekend with Parent B, then reverse in Week 2. The specific pattern should be tailored to the child’s schooling, activities and temperament.

When the Family Advocate’s input is required

The Office of the Family Advocate, established under the Mediation in Certain Divorce Matters Act 24 of 1987, must be notified whenever a divorce involves minor children. The Family Advocate (or a delegated family counsellor) will investigate the proposed parenting arrangements, interview both parents and, where appropriate, the child, and furnish a report and recommendation to the court. In practice, a well-prepared parenting plan that both parents have agreed to, supported by a Family Advocate recommendation, will almost always be endorsed by the presiding officer.

Can a child decide which parent to live with? Not unilaterally. The child’s views are one factor among many listed in section 7 of the Children’s Act. Courts afford greater weight to the expressed preferences of older, more mature children, typically from about twelve years of age, but the final determination always rests on the totality of the best-interests analysis.

Maintenance for Children and Spousal Support in South Africa

Legal obligations for child maintenance

Both parents are legally obliged to maintain their children in proportion to their respective means, as provided for in the Maintenance Act 99 of 1998 and the common law duty of support. There is no statutory formula in South Africa. Instead, maintenance is calculated by establishing the child’s reasonable needs (school fees, medical aid, food, clothing, transport, extracurricular activities and a proportionate share of housing costs) and then allocating those costs between the parents according to each parent’s income and earning capacity.

Prior to engaging in negotiations relating to child maintenance, the parties should collect and exchange comprehensive financial documentation to ensure that any maintenance arrangement is fair, informed and sustainable. Such documentation should include proof of income (including salary slips, IRP5 certificates, tax returns and any additional sources of income), recent bank statements, details of employment benefits, and evidence of all monthly expenses and financial obligations. In addition, documentation relating specifically to the child should be obtained, including school fee statements, aftercare and extramural costs, medical aid contributions and medical expenses, educational expenses, clothing costs, transport expenses, childcare costs and any other expenditure incurred in meeting the child’s reasonable needs. Information relating to assets, liabilities and discretionary expenditure may also be relevant in assessing the parties’ respective financial capacities and in facilitating meaningful and productive maintenance negotiations.

Interim versus final maintenance and enforcement

Where one spouse needs immediate financial relief during the divorce proceedings, a Rule 43 application (in the High Court) or Rule 58 application (in the Regional Court) can secure interim maintenance, a contribution to legal costs and interim care or contact arrangements, typically within weeks of the application being served. Final maintenance is then agreed in the settlement or determined at trial.

If a maintenance order is breached, the Maintenance Act provides robust enforcement mechanisms, including garnishee orders against the defaulter’s salary and, ultimately, committal proceedings for contempt of court. For a practical overview of how to enforce a court order in South Africa, I recommend our separate guide.

Property Division in South Africa: Matrimonial Regimes, Pensions, the Family Home and Excluded Assets

How each matrimonial regime affects the division of property

The matrimonial property regime is the single most important factor in determining what assets fall into the pool available for division. The table below summarises the three regimes:

Regime What is divided Practical implication
In community of property Entire joint estate (all assets and liabilities) Equal 50/50 division unless the court grants a forfeiture order under section 9 of the Divorce Act
Out of community with accrual Accrual (net growth) of each estate during the marriage Each spouse’s commencement value (declared in the antenuptial contract) is compared with their net estate at divorce; the spouse with the smaller accrual claims half the difference
Out of community without accrual Nothing, separate estates No division of assets (though contractual or unjust-enrichment claims may apply in exceptional cases)

A forfeiture order, where one party forfeits part or all of the benefits of the marriage, is discretionary and typically granted only where one spouse would be unduly benefited by the marriage. Courts consider the duration of the marriage, each party’s conduct and contributions, and any substantial misconduct.

Pension funds and retirement interests, divorce South Africa

Pension and retirement-fund interests are frequently the most valuable asset after the family home. The Divorce Act (section 7(7) and 7(8)) allows the court to order that a portion of a member spouse’s pension interest be paid directly to the non-member spouse. The Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956 and regulations issued by the Financial Sector Conduct Authority govern the mechanics of this transfer. Critically, the “pension interest” that may be claimed is calculated as at the date of divorce, not the date of retirement, and the method of calculation differs between defined-benefit and defined-contribution funds.

In practice, the non-member spouse’s legal representative must serve the divorce summons and settlement agreement on the fund, and the fund is obliged to make payment within a prescribed period. Tax is deducted at source. Understanding pension treatment is essential to any divorce settlement structured where there are children, property and business interests, because pension values often dwarf liquid assets.

The family home, mortgage bonds and occupation orders

Who keeps the house in a divorce? The answer depends on the regime and the parties’ agreement. Common options include one spouse retaining the property and compensating the other from other assets, selling the property and dividing the net proceeds, or, more rarely, an occupation order allowing one spouse (usually the primary caregiver of minor children) to remain in the home for a fixed period before sale. Bond liabilities must be addressed explicitly: the spouse retaining the property should assume sole liability for the bond, and the other spouse’s name should be removed from the mortgage registration.

Excluded assets: inheritances, gifts, trusts and antenuptial clauses

In a marriage out of community of property, assets expressly excluded by the antenuptial contract, and inheritances or donations received under an express exclusion clause, fall outside the divisible estate. In a marriage in community of property, however, inheritances received by one spouse generally fall into the joint estate unless the will or donation instrument specifically stipulates otherwise. Trusts present a further layer of complexity: where a court finds that a trust is the alter ego of a spouse (the so-called “trust veneer” or “piercing the trust” doctrine), the trust assets may be taken into account for purposes of redistribution.

Practical next step: Before any negotiation begins, both parties should exchange a comprehensive sworn disclosure, property valuations, bank statements, share certificates, trust deeds, company financials and pension-fund benefit statements. If there are red flags suggesting hidden assets, appoint a forensic accountant early.

Business Interests in a Divorce, Valuation, Liquidity and Practical Division

Valuation approaches for business interests in a divorce

Where one or both spouses hold interests in a business, whether a sole proprietorship, close corporation, private company or partnership, an independent valuation is almost always necessary. Three principal methods are used in South African practice:

Valuation method Best used for Key pros and cons
Market (comparable transactions) Established businesses with comparable sale data Pros: market-driven, objective. Cons: limited comparables for niche or small SMEs.
Income (discounted cash flow / capitalisation of earnings) Operating businesses with stable and projectable cash flows Pros: captures future earning power. Cons: highly sensitive to discount-rate and growth assumptions.
Net asset value Holding companies, property-investment entities, asset-heavy businesses Pros: straightforward and verifiable. Cons: ignores goodwill and future earnings potential.

In my experience, disputes about business valuations consume more time and cost than almost any other element of a complex divorce. Appointing a single, jointly agreed business valuer or if the need arises, a forensic accountant, rather than duelling experts, is the most efficient approach, and I recommend building this into the settlement protocol from the outset.

Options for settlement: buy-outs, offsets and share transfers

Once a value is established, the parties must decide how to deal with the business interest practically. The most common options are:

  • Buy-out. The spouse who will continue running the business pays the other an agreed lump sum (or structured instalments) representing their share of the value.
  • Offset. The business interest is allocated to one spouse, and other assets of equivalent value, property, investments, pension, are allocated to the other.
  • Sale and division. The business is sold to a third-party and the net proceeds are divided, usually a last resort because of market-timing risk and forced-sale discounts.
  • Share transfer. In some cases, shares are transferred to the non-operating spouse, but this rarely works in closely held companies because it can create governance deadlocks.

Shareholders’ agreements, minority protections and tax on transfer

Before agreeing to any share transfer, review existing shareholders’ agreements for pre-emption rights, tag-along or drag-along clauses and restrictions on transfer. A transfer that breaches a shareholders’ agreement can be challenged by other shareholders, derailing the entire settlement. Any transfer of shares will also trigger a potential Capital Gains Tax event (discussed below) and may require Securities Regulation Panel clearance if thresholds are met. Where the business operates through a trust, the points about trust-veneer doctrine mentioned above apply equally.

Tax Consequences and Financial Practicalities

Capital Gains Tax, donations tax and VAT traps

Asset transfers between spouses pursuant to a divorce order are generally exempt from donations tax under section 56(1)(b) of the Income Tax Act. However, Capital Gains Tax may apply on the transfer of capital assets, particularly immovable property and business interests, unless a specific roll-over relief applies. The Eighth Schedule to the Income Tax Act provides for a roll-over of capital gains on the transfer of assets between spouses as part of a divorce order, meaning the gain is deferred rather than triggered. VAT can be a trap where one spouse is a registered vendor and assets such as commercial property or vehicles are transferred, the VAT implications must be modelled before the settlement is signed.

Pension transfer tax treatment and SARS reporting

Pension-interest amounts paid to a non-member spouse in terms of a divorce order are taxed in the hands of the non-member spouse as a retirement-fund lump-sum withdrawal benefit, at the applicable SARS tax table rates. The fund deducts tax before making payment. Both parties should obtain up-to-date tax directives from SARS and factor the after-tax value of the pension transfer into their settlement calculations. For broader estate-planning changes in South Africa for 2026, see our separate guide.

Practical next step: Engage a tax adviser before signing the consent paper. An incorrectly structured transfer can result in an unexpected tax liability that significantly alters the economic balance of the settlement.

Dispute Resolution, Mediation, Arbitration and Making the Consent Paper a Court Order

Mediation benefits and typical agenda items for a divorce settlement

Mediation in a divorce in South Africa is not mandatory (except where court-annexed mediation rules apply), but in my view it is the single most effective tool for resolving complex settlements efficiently. A skilled mediator structures sessions around each pillar, parenting, maintenance, property, business, tax, and helps parties reach an agreement that is more durable than a court-imposed order because both parties have ownership of it. Mediation is confidential, faster and substantially less expensive than a contested trial.

Consent paper, converting a settlement agreement into a court order

Once the parties have agreed on all terms, their attorneys prepare a consent paper (the settlement agreement) which is annexed to the summons and particulars of claim and placed before the court on the unopposed roll. The presiding officer reviews the agreement, the Family Advocate’s report and, if satisfied that the settlement is fair and in the best interests of any children, grants a decree of divorce incorporating the settlement as an order of court. This process typically takes a single court appearance.

A Rule 43 application can be brought at any stage of the divorce proceedings to obtain interim relief, including interim maintenance, a contribution to legal costs and temporary care and contact arrangements, while the final settlement is being negotiated.

Practical Step-by-Step Checklist for a Divorce Settlement Structured Around Children, Property and Business

  1. Full financial disclosure. Both spouses exchange sworn asset-and-liability statements, three months’ bank statements, payslips, company financials and pension-fund benefit statements.
  2. Confirm the matrimonial property regime. Locate the antenuptial contract (if any) and confirm whether the accrual system applies.
  3. Independent valuations. Appoint a property valuer, and if there are business interests, appoint a single, jointly agreed business valuer or if the need arises, a forensic accountant.
  4. Draft the parenting plan. Agree on residence, contact, holidays, schooling, medical decisions and dispute escalation.
  5. Calculate maintenance. Prepare detailed child-expense budgets and proportional income analyses for both child and spousal maintenance.
  6. Model tax consequences. Obtain tax directives for pension transfers and model CGT, donations tax and VAT on proposed asset transfers.
  7. Negotiate and draft the consent paper. Consolidate all terms into a single settlement agreement with annexures (parenting plan, asset schedule, maintenance schedule).
  8. Family Advocate review. Submit the parenting plan and supporting documents to the Family Advocate for investigation and recommendation.
  9. Court application. Place the consent paper on the unopposed divorce roll, attend the hearing and obtain the decree incorporating the settlement.
  10. Implementation. Transfer property, register bond changes, effect pension pay-outs, update wills and beneficiary nominations, and change property ownership registrations.

Conclusion

A divorce settlement structured where there are children, property and business interests demands rigorous preparation, transparent disclosure and expert guidance at every stage. The five pillars, parenting arrangements, maintenance, property division under the correct matrimonial regime, business valuation and tax planning, are interdependent: conceding too much on one pillar without understanding the downstream effects on another almost always leads to regret or re-litigation. In my practice, I have seen that couples who invest in proper disclosure and mediation at the outset reach settlements that are faster, cheaper and far more durable than those imposed by a court after a contested trial.

Whether you are a business owner concerned about the valuation of your company, a parent focused on securing a stable environment for your children, or an adviser helping a client navigate the process, the checklist and framework set out above will serve as a reliable roadmap. For related immigration considerations that may arise when a spouse holds a visa tied to the marriage, see our guides on permanent residency through marriage and changing visa status in South Africa.

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mandy Simpson at MANDY SIMPSON ATTORNEYS.

Sources

  1. Divorce Act 70 of 1979, Government of South Africa
  2. Children’s Act 38 of 2005, Government of South Africa
  3. Maintenance Act 99 of 1998, Government of South Africa
  4. South African Legal Information Institute (SAFLII), case law repository
  5. Department of Justice and Constitutional Development, Family Advocate
  6. South African Revenue Service (SARS), tax guides
  7. Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA), pension fund regulation

FAQs

Which assets are divided during a divorce in South Africa?
The assets that fall into the divisible pool depend on the matrimonial property regime. In a marriage in community of property, the entire joint estate, all assets and all liabilities, is divided equally. In a marriage out of community with accrual, only the net growth (accrual) of each estate during the marriage is shared. In a marriage without accrual, each spouse retains their separate estate entirely. Pension interests may be claimed regardless of the regime, in terms of section 7(7) of the Divorce Act.
It depends on the regime and the terms of the bequest. In a marriage in community of property, an inheritance falls into the joint estate unless the testator’s will expressly excludes it. In a marriage out of community of property, inheritances are generally excluded from the accrual calculation provided the antenuptial contract or will contains an appropriate exclusion clause. If inherited funds have been mixed with joint marital funds, tracing may be required.
There is no automatic rule. The most common outcomes are: one spouse retains the property and compensates the other (from liquid assets or pension), the property is sold and net proceeds divided, or an occupation order allows the primary caregiver to remain in the home for a specified period. Bond liability must be formally re-registered in the retaining spouse’s name alone.
A child cannot unilaterally choose. Section 7 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005 requires the court to consider the child’s views in light of the child’s age, maturity and stage of development. In practice, the views of older children (typically twelve and above) are given significant weight, but they are always weighed alongside all other best-interests factors.
A consent paper is the written settlement agreement signed by both spouses, which sets out the agreed terms on parenting, maintenance, property division and any other relevant matters. It is filed with the court together with the divorce summons and, once the presiding officer is satisfied that it is fair and in the children’s best interests, it is incorporated into the decree of divorce and becomes a binding court order.
Business interests are first independently valued, typically using a market, income or net-asset approach, and then dealt with through a buy-out, an asset offset, a sale to a third party or, less commonly, a share transfer. Existing shareholders’ agreements must be reviewed for pre-emption rights, and the Capital Gains Tax consequences of any transfer should be modelled before the settlement is finalised. Appointing a single jointly instructed forensic accountant is the most cost-effective approach.
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How a Divorce Settlement Is Structured When There Are Children, Property and Business Interests in South Africa

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