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WA Property Settlement

Property settlement in Western Australia

WA has its own Family Court - here is how that affects your property settlement and finance options.

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The four-step property settlement process

Australian courts follow a standard four-step process for dividing property after separation:

  1. Identify and value the asset pool - all assets, liabilities, superannuation, and financial resources of both parties
  2. Assess contributions - financial contributions (income, assets brought in), non-financial contributions (renovations, business work), and homemaker/parenting contributions
  3. Consider future needs - age, health, earning capacity, care of children, length of relationship
  4. Ensure the outcome is just and equitable - the court checks the overall fairness of the proposed split

Property settlement is not automatically 50/50. The split depends on each couple's specific circumstances.

Time limits for property claims

Married couples: 12 months from the date the divorce order becomes final.

De facto couples: 2 years from the date of separation.

If you miss these deadlines, you need court permission to proceed. This is not guaranteed. Act early.

WA's unique Family Court

Western Australia is the only state with its own Family Court. The Family Court of Western Australia handles both married and de facto matters, but de facto couples are governed by the Family Court Act 1997 (WA), not the federal Family Law Act.

Key differences for de facto couples in WA:

Stamp duty in WA

WA charges nominal duty of $20 (rather than a full exemption) for separation property transfers. The practical effect is the same as zero duty.

How we help with property settlement finance

WA separation finance guide Perth guide Stamp duty by state

True wellbeing begins at home.

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