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Divorce Real Estate Specialist Utah | Treasured Properties — Troy Moultrie CDRE
Divorce Real Estate Specialist

Your Home Shouldn't Be
Another Battle.

Divorce is one of the most difficult things you'll ever go through. The real estate piece doesn't have to make it harder. Troy Moultrie is a Certified Divorce Real Estate Specialist® who knows Utah's courts, procedures, and laws — and who fights to protect your equity every step of the way.

Certified Divorce Real Estate Specialist® (CDRE) Licensed Associate Broker Member, NADP Utah Court-Experienced

99% of real estate agents have never handled a divorce listing. A divorce sale involves courts, attorneys, mediators, restraining orders, co-ownership disputes, and legal deadlines that most agents have never encountered. The wrong agent can cost you tens of thousands of dollars — or blow up your settlement entirely.

Why It Matters Who You Hire

Most Agents Fail Divorce Listings.
Here's Why.

What's at Stake
99%
of real estate agents have no training in divorce real estate, court procedures, or how to work with attorneys and mediators without creating liability
1 in 2
Utah marriages ends in divorce — yet almost no agents are equipped to handle what comes with it
$50K+
average equity loss when a divorce property is mishandled — through wrong pricing, improper disclosures, or missed legal requirements
6–12
months typical for a contested Utah divorce — your agent must be able to work within court timelines, not outside them
What a CDRE Does That Others Don't
  • Works directly with your divorce attorney — coordinating disclosures, listing timelines, and settlement agreements without creating conflict or liability
  • Understands court orders — temporary orders, injunctions, restraining orders, and when court approval is required before listing or accepting an offer
  • Stays neutral when required — a CDRE represents the transaction, not just one spouse, protecting both parties' equity and the integrity of the process
  • Knows Utah's equitable distribution rules — not community property, not 50/50, but fair — and how that affects pricing, timing, and negotiation
  • Handles high-conflict situations — when spouses can't communicate directly, a CDRE creates a buffer that keeps the sale moving forward
  • Coordinates with mediators and GALs — knows who needs to sign off on what, and when, without stalling the process
  • Licensed Associate Broker — a higher license level than most agents, meaning more experience and accountability
  • 30+ years construction background — Troy can assess the property's condition before listing, identify deferred maintenance, and advise on cost-effective prep to maximize proceeds for both parties
Think Twice Before You Do This

Using a Friend or Family Member
as Your Agent in a Divorce

It seems like it would help — someone you trust, lower commission, familiar face. But in a divorce, using a friend or family member as your agent is one of the most common and costly mistakes people make. Here's the honest picture.

The Perceived Upside
  • You trust them personally and feel comfortable
  • They may reduce or waive their commission
  • Familiar with your family and circumstances
  • Feels like keeping it "in the family"
The Real Cost
  • A friend cannot be truly neutral — courts and attorneys will challenge any agent perceived as favoring one spouse
  • They likely have zero experience with court orders, injunctions, or attorney coordination — one mistake can invalidate your sale or delay your settlement by months
  • If your spouse also knows the agent, you have a conflict of interest problem that can blow up in court
  • Reduced commission sounds good until you realize the home was underpriced by $30,000 because they lacked the experience to price and negotiate a divorce property
  • They're emotionally invested in your outcome — which means they can't give you objective advice when you need it most
  • If something goes wrong, you've damaged both the sale and the relationship
  • In a high-conflict divorce, your spouse's attorney will use your agent's relationship to you against you in court
In a divorce, your agent is not just a salesperson. They are a neutral professional operating inside a legal proceeding. The wrong agent doesn't just cost you money — they can cost you your settlement.
Utah Is Different From Other States

What You Must Know About
Utah Divorce Property Law

Every state handles divorce property differently. Nevada and Idaho are community property states — Utah is not. Understanding Utah's specific rules is not optional. It's the difference between protecting your equity and losing it.

01
Equitable Distribution — Not 50/50

Utah divides marital property fairly — not equally. Courts weigh the length of the marriage, each spouse's income and earning capacity, health, contributions, and more. In long marriages, the split often approaches 50/50. In short marriages, courts may return each party to where they were before. There is no automatic equal split.

02
Marital vs. Separate Property

Property acquired during the marriage is marital property — regardless of whose name is on the title. Property owned before marriage, or received as a gift or inheritance, is typically separate. But separate property can become marital property if it was commingled — for example, if a pre-marital home was paid for with joint income during the marriage.

03
Title Does Not Determine Ownership

In Utah, it does not matter whose name is on the deed or mortgage. If the home was acquired or improved during the marriage, it's subject to equitable division. One spouse's name on the title does not give them the right to sell, refinance, or remove equity without court approval once divorce proceedings begin.

04
Automatic Injunctions at Filing

Under Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 109, once a divorce petition is filed, both parties are automatically prohibited from transferring, encumbering, concealing, or disposing of any property without written consent of the other party or a court order. This means neither spouse can list or sell the home without consent or court approval once divorce is filed.

05
30-Day Mandatory Waiting Period

Utah law requires a minimum 30-day waiting period between filing the petition and finalizing the divorce. Uncontested divorces typically close in 1–3 months. Contested divorces involving property disputes can take 6–12 months or longer. Courts can waive the waiting period in extraordinary circumstances.

06
Court Can Order the Sale

If spouses cannot agree on what to do with the marital home, a Utah judge can order the property sold and the proceeds split equitably. The court can also set deadlines for listing, approve list price, and require both spouses to cooperate with the agent. A CDRE knows how to work within these court-ordered frameworks.

The Process, Step by Step

How a Divorce Real Estate Sale
Works in Utah

Understanding the sequence of events — and where your real estate agent fits in — removes a lot of the anxiety. Here is how a typical divorce property sale unfolds in Utah.

1
Petition for Divorce is Filed

One spouse (the petitioner) files a Petition for Divorce with the District Court in the county where either spouse resides. Filing fees are approximately $318 as of 2025. Once filed, the automatic injunction takes effect — neither party can transfer or encumber property without consent or court order. The other spouse has 21 days (if in Utah) or 30 days (if out of state) to respond.

Troy's role here: If you know divorce is coming, contact Troy before filing or immediately after. He can advise on timing, what documents you'll need, and how to protect your position in the home from day one.
2
Temporary Orders (If Needed)

Either spouse can request temporary orders from the court to address immediate needs during the divorce — who stays in the home, who pays the mortgage, temporary child custody, and support. These orders remain in effect until the final decree. Missing mortgage payments during this period damages both spouses' credit — the court order must be clear on who pays what.

Critical: If you are ordered to stay in the home or pay the mortgage during the divorce, make sure you have access to the online mortgage portal and all account statements. Do not let your spouse control access to financial information you are legally responsible for.
3
Financial Disclosures & Asset Valuation

Both parties must complete detailed Financial Declarations — income, expenses, assets, and debts — and serve them on the other party. For real estate, this means establishing fair market value through an appraisal or comparative market analysis. If spouses disagree on value, each may hire an independent appraiser. Troy provides CMAs that are defensible in court and accepted by attorneys and mediators throughout Southern Utah.

4
Mediation

Utah courts require mediation in most contested divorces before a trial can be set. A neutral mediator helps both spouses try to reach agreement on property division, custody, support, and other issues. Troy has worked alongside mediators throughout Washington County and can provide documentation, valuations, and market analysis that supports a productive mediation session — rather than one that stalls over disputed home value.

Bring to mediation: A current market analysis from Troy, your mortgage balance and payoff statement, a list of any major repairs needed, and an estimate of net proceeds after commissions and closing costs.
5
Decision: Sell, Buy Out, or Keep

Once agreement is reached (or the court orders it), the couple faces three basic options for the home: sell and split proceeds equitably; one spouse buys out the other's equity and refinances; or both continue to co-own temporarily (often until children finish school). Each option has financial, credit, and legal implications — Troy walks both parties through the pros and cons of each so the decision is made with full information.

6
Listing, Marketing & Offers

Once the path is clear — whether by mutual agreement or court order — Troy lists and markets the property. In a divorce sale, both spouses must typically sign the listing agreement and any offer acceptance. Troy manages communication with both parties professionally, reduces direct conflict between spouses, and keeps the transaction moving. If one spouse is uncooperative, Troy knows exactly what steps the attorney needs to take to compel performance.

Troy's construction background matters here: He can walk the property before listing and identify repairs or improvements that will maximize sale price — and knows which ones are worth doing and which aren't. This directly increases proceeds for both parties.
7
Closing & Distribution of Proceeds

At closing, the mortgage is paid off, commissions and closing costs are deducted, and proceeds are distributed according to the divorce decree or settlement agreement. Both spouses typically sign closing documents — either in person or remotely. The title company issues checks directly to each party (or their attorneys) per the court order. Troy coordinates with both attorneys and the title company to make sure there are no surprises at the table.

8
Final Decree & Moving Forward

Once all issues are resolved, the judge signs the final Decree of Divorce. Property division matters cannot be reopened after the decree is final except under very limited circumstances. This is why getting the real estate piece right — pricing, negotiations, proceeds distribution — is so critical. There are no do-overs after the decree is signed.

What comes next: If you need to buy a new home after divorce, Troy can also help you navigate qualifying for a mortgage as a single buyer, understanding your new budget, and finding the right property for your next chapter.
Get This Done Now

Your Divorce Real Estate
Action Checklist

Whether you've just filed or are still considering divorce, these steps protect your financial position. Don't wait until your attorney tells you to — start now.

📋 Documents to Gather Immediately
  • Mortgage statement showing current balance and lender contact
  • Access to online mortgage portal (login credentials)
  • Most recent property tax statement
  • Homeowner's insurance policy and renewal date
  • HOA statements (if applicable)
  • Deed / title documents for all real property
  • Home equity line of credit (HELOC) statements
  • Last 3 years of tax returns (joint and individual)
  • Last 3 months of bank statements (all accounts)
  • Documentation of any separate property (pre-marital, inheritance)
  • Receipts for major home improvements (adds to equity basis)
  • Prenuptial or postnuptial agreement (if any)
✅ Actions to Take Right Now
  • Pull your credit report from all three bureaus — Experian, TransUnion, Equifax — at AnnualCreditReport.com
  • Check for unauthorized accounts or new debt opened in your name
  • Open a personal bank account in your name only — separate from any joint accounts
  • Document your direct deposit or income — ensure it goes to your individual account
  • Set up credit monitoring — any new debt your spouse incurs could affect you
  • Continue paying the mortgage — missed payments hurt both spouses' credit, even if your spouse was ordered to pay
  • Do not remove funds from joint accounts beyond normal living expenses — courts will scrutinize this
  • Contact Troy for a confidential home valuation — know your equity position before mediation
  • Do not list or sell the home without your attorney's approval and, if divorce is filed, court authorization
  • Change passwords on personal accounts — but do not lock your spouse out of marital accounts (courts take this seriously)
Protect What You've Built

How to Protect Your Credit
During a Divorce in Utah

Divorce itself does not damage your credit. But what happens during a divorce — missed payments, unauthorized accounts, maxed-out joint cards — absolutely can. Here is what to know and what to do.

Joint Debt — The Biggest Trap
  • If your name is on a joint account, you are liable regardless of what the divorce decree says. Creditors are not bound by your divorce settlement.
  • If your spouse is assigned a joint debt in the decree but doesn't pay, the creditor can come after you — and it will show on your credit.
  • Work with your attorney to have joint accounts either paid off and closed or refinanced into one name before finalizing the decree.
  • Request to freeze joint credit cards with your spouse's consent — or ask the card company to remove your spouse as an authorized user if they are not a co-owner.
The Mortgage — Most Critical
  • Never miss a mortgage payment during divorce — even if the court temporarily assigns responsibility to your spouse. One missed payment can drop your score 100+ points.
  • If your spouse is supposed to pay and isn't, pay it yourself and seek reimbursement through your attorney. Your credit is worth more than the argument.
  • If one spouse is keeping the home, they must refinance in their own name — simply changing the deed is not enough. Your name stays on the mortgage until refinanced.
  • Get a payoff statement from your lender — this is the actual amount needed to fully pay off the mortgage at closing, which may differ from the balance on your statement.
Monitor Everything
  • Pull your credit reports from all three bureaus — Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax — at AnnualCreditReport.com. You get one free per year from each.
  • Set up free credit monitoring through your bank, Credit Karma, or directly through a bureau. Any new account or hard inquiry should be investigated immediately.
  • Review all account statements monthly — look for new debt, balance increases, or missed payments on accounts you share.
  • If your spouse opens credit in your name without permission, this is identity theft — report it to the bureau and your attorney immediately.
Timing Is Everything
  • Do not apply for new major credit (auto loan, new mortgage) during the divorce — it can complicate your financial disclosures and affect your ability to qualify post-divorce.
  • If you plan to buy a new home after divorce, start preserving and building your individual credit now. Lenders will want 12–24 months of individual credit history.
  • Keep existing individual credit cards active and current — these establish your individual credit history separate from your spouse.
  • Talk to a mortgage lender before the divorce is final to understand what you'll qualify for as a single borrower. Troy can connect you with the right lender.
Three Paths for the Marital Home

What Can Actually Happen
to Your Home in a Utah Divorce

There are three basic outcomes for the marital home in a Utah divorce. Each has financial, legal, and practical implications. Troy helps both parties understand all three before deciding.

01
Sell the Home & Split Proceeds

The most common outcome. The home is listed, sold, mortgage paid off, and net proceeds divided equitably per the decree. Both spouses walk away with cash and a clean break from the mortgage.

Clean financial separation Both removed from mortgage liability Cash to start over Usually fastest resolution Troy manages the entire process
02
One Spouse Buys Out the Other

One spouse keeps the home by paying the other their share of the equity — either in cash or by offsetting other assets. The keeping spouse must refinance the mortgage in their own name to remove the other from liability.

Children stay in familiar home No moving costs for one spouse Spouse must qualify solo for new mortgage Requires clean appraisal and refinance Troy provides valuation for buyout negotiations
03
Deferred Sale — Co-Own Temporarily

Both spouses continue to own the home jointly for a defined period — often until a child finishes school or the market improves. This requires a very specific co-ownership agreement and carries significant financial and legal risk if not structured correctly.

Allows children to finish school Potential to sell in better market Both remain on mortgage — risky if one stops paying Requires detailed court-approved agreement Troy can manage the property during deferred period
Stop Believing These

Common Myths About Divorce
Real Estate in Utah

Bad information costs people money and time. Here are the most common misconceptions Troy hears from divorcing homeowners in Southern Utah — and the real truth.

Myth
"My name isn't on the deed, so I have no claim to the home."
✓ The Truth

In Utah, title does not determine ownership in a divorce. If the home was purchased during the marriage, or if marital funds were used to pay the mortgage, both spouses have an equitable interest in the property — regardless of whose name is on the deed. Even if only one spouse's name appears on the title, the court can still divide the equity between both.

Myth
"Utah divorces split everything 50/50."
✓ The Truth

Utah is an equitable distribution state — not a community property state. Equitable means fair, not equal. Courts consider the length of the marriage, each spouse's income and earning capacity, contributions to the marriage, health, and more. The split could be 60/40, 70/30, or something else entirely. Never assume 50/50 — always get legal counsel.

Myth
"I can sell the house whenever I want — it's my home too."
✓ The Truth

Once a divorce petition is filed, Utah's automatic injunction (Rule 109) prohibits either spouse from selling, transferring, or encumbering property without written consent of the other party or a court order. Listing and selling the home without authorization can result in contempt of court and could seriously damage your case. Always consult your attorney before taking any action on the property after filing.

Myth
"The divorce decree protects me from my ex's mortgage obligations."
✓ The Truth

Creditors are not parties to your divorce and are not bound by your decree. If your decree assigns the mortgage to your ex-spouse and they stop paying, the lender can still come after you — and report the delinquency to your credit. The only true protection is refinancing the mortgage out of your name. A decree provision is not enough. Troy strongly advises both parties to require refinancing as a condition of any buyout agreement.

Myth
"I owned this house before we got married, so it's all mine."
✓ The Truth

Pre-marital property is generally separate property — but it can become marital property through commingling. If you owned a home before marriage but both of you paid the mortgage during the marriage using joint income, made improvements using marital funds, or both names were added to the deed — the home or a portion of its equity may now be subject to equitable division. This is one of the most contested and complex areas of Utah divorce law.

Myth
"Any real estate agent can handle a divorce sale."
✓ The Truth

A divorce sale is not a standard real estate transaction. It involves two sellers who may be in active conflict, court orders that dictate what can and cannot be done with the property, attorneys who must approve every significant decision, and legal deadlines tied to the court's schedule. An agent without divorce real estate training will make mistakes — some of which cannot be undone after the decree is signed. The CDRE designation exists specifically because this type of transaction requires specialized knowledge.

Myth
"If my spouse moves out, they have no claim to the home."
✓ The Truth

Moving out does not waive a spouse's property rights. The departing spouse still has an equitable interest in the marital home. In fact, moving out can sometimes hurt a spouse's position regarding who is awarded the home — because the staying spouse may be deemed to need it more (especially with children). Never move out without discussing strategy with your attorney first.

Myth
"I don't need to check my credit — we always paid our bills on time."
✓ The Truth

Check your credit immediately and repeatedly throughout the divorce process. Your spouse may open new accounts, run up balances on joint cards, or allow joint accounts to fall behind — all of which affect your credit. Divorce is also a common time for financial deception. Unauthorized accounts opened in your name are identity theft. You cannot protect what you aren't monitoring. Pull reports from all three bureaus: Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax.

Your Questions, Answered

Frequently Asked Questions
About Divorce Real Estate in Utah

Yes. If spouses cannot agree on what to do with the marital home, either spouse can petition the court to order the sale. A Utah judge has the authority to require the property be listed, approve the listing price, and direct how proceeds are divided. Working with a CDRE ensures the listing process, pricing, and sale are done correctly under the court's direction — protecting both parties' equity.
This is one of the most common challenges in a divorce sale — and one of the most important reasons to work with a CDRE. If a spouse refuses to cooperate, your attorney can file a motion with the court to compel performance. The court can hold a non-compliant spouse in contempt. In some cases, the court can authorize one party to sign on behalf of both. Troy works closely with divorce attorneys throughout Washington County and knows exactly how to document uncooperative behavior in a way that supports your attorney's motion.
Equity (the difference between market value and outstanding mortgage balance) is divided equitably — not necessarily equally. In longer marriages, courts often approach a 50/50 split. In shorter marriages, courts may put each spouse back in the financial position they were in before the marriage. The court considers income, earning capacity, contributions to the marriage, health, and other factors. Troy provides certified market analyses that establish defensible home values used by attorneys and mediators in negotiating the equity split.
An underwater mortgage (negative equity) is a marital debt that must also be divided equitably. Options include: continuing to make payments until the home recovers value; a short sale with lender approval; or negotiating with the lender for a deed in lieu of foreclosure. Each option has different credit and tax implications. Troy has experience with distressed properties and can help you understand all options — and will coordinate with your attorney to pursue the one that minimizes damage to both parties.
Not necessarily. Courts can approve a deferred sale — where both spouses continue to co-own the property for a defined period (often until a child graduates from school). However, this requires a very specific and enforceable co-ownership agreement that addresses who pays the mortgage, who handles maintenance, how proceeds are split when eventually sold, and what happens if one spouse fails to make payments. Without a tight agreement, a deferred sale creates enormous financial risk. Troy can manage the property during the deferred period through Treasured Property Management, protecting both parties' investment.
Yes — but you must be able to qualify for a new mortgage on your own, and you must refinance to remove your spouse's name from the loan. A signed decree alone does not remove your spouse from mortgage liability. You'll need to demonstrate sufficient individual income and credit history to qualify. Lenders typically require a credit score of at least 620 for conventional financing. Troy works with trusted local lenders who specialize in post-divorce mortgage qualification and can help you understand whether a buyout is financially feasible before committing to it in the decree.
Potentially. Under current federal tax law, married couples can exclude up to $500,000 in capital gains from the sale of a primary residence (if both spouses lived in it for 2 of the last 5 years). Single filers only get $250,000. The timing of your sale relative to when the divorce is finalized can significantly affect how much of your gain is tax-exempt. Troy strongly recommends consulting a CPA or tax advisor before finalizing your decision on timing. This is not an area to handle without expert guidance.
Once the home is listed, a typical St. George market home sells within 30–90 days depending on price, condition, and market conditions. However, the overall timeline from decision to close is affected by the divorce proceedings themselves — mediation schedules, court approval requirements, and whether one spouse cooperates. In an uncontested divorce where both spouses agree to sell, the whole process can move quickly. In a contested case, the real estate piece may need to wait for the court to issue orders. Troy works within whatever timeline your case requires and coordinates directly with your attorney to prevent the real estate process from stalling your divorce — or your divorce from stalling the real estate process.
Nevada and Idaho are community property states. In community property states, most assets acquired during the marriage are automatically owned 50/50 by both spouses and are divided equally in divorce. Utah is an equitable distribution state. There is no automatic 50/50 presumption — courts divide property based on what is fair given the specific circumstances of the marriage. This means Utah divorces can be more nuanced, and the outcome depends significantly on how well each party's case is presented. It also means a skilled attorney and an experienced CDRE can have a major impact on the outcome. If you moved to Utah from Nevada or Idaho, Utah courts may apply special rules regarding the property you brought with you — another reason to work with someone who knows Utah law specifically.
A Certified Divorce Real Estate Expert® (CDRE) is a real estate professional who has completed specialized training in the legal, financial, and procedural aspects of divorce real estate — including how to work with divorce attorneys, courts, mediators, and guardians ad litem. Only a small fraction of licensed agents hold this designation. The CDRE designation means Troy has been trained to handle the complexities that destroy divorce transactions when handled by untrained agents: court order compliance, dual-client neutrality, attorney coordination, and legal timeline management. If your home is your largest marital asset, the person you hire to sell it should understand the legal environment it's being sold in.
What Clients Say

Real People. Real Results.

★★★★★
"

Troy and his team were very fair, knowledgeable, and experienced with handling my divorce sale. He worked hard and made an impossible sale happen. I'm super grateful.

Verified Client
Divorce Sale, Utah
★★★★★
"

I can not recommend Troy enough. He isn't like other realtors — he has your actual interest at heart. In a divorce situation, that means everything.

Verified Client
Southern Utah
★★★★★
"

Troy knew exactly how to work with both attorneys and kept the sale moving even when my ex was being difficult. I don't know what I would have done without him.

Verified Client
Washington County, UT

Protect Your Equity.
Talk to a CDRE First.

Your consultation is confidential. Troy works with one spouse, both spouses, or as a neutral agent for the transaction — whatever your situation requires. There is no cost to talking. There is a real cost to waiting.

Free Confidential Consultation CDRE Certified Court-Experienced Southern Utah Based
Important: The information on this page is provided for educational purposes and reflects general Utah divorce real estate practices. It is not legal advice. Every divorce situation is unique. Always consult a licensed Utah divorce attorney for advice specific to your case. Troy Moultrie is a licensed real estate professional, not an attorney, and does not provide legal counsel.
© Treasured Properties · Brokered by Real Broker LLC | Luxury Division · Troy Moultrie, CDRE — Certified Divorce Real Estate Specialist® · (435) 327-5545