System
Equitable Distribution
Default Split
50 / 50
Governing Statute

What the Law Says

Montana courts divide marital property under an equitable distribution standard — the judge decides what's fair, which may or may not be 50/50. The statute lists specific factors the court must weigh.

Montana divides all marital property equitably regardless of how title is held. Courts use a multi-factor analysis to determine a fair distribution appropriate to the circumstances of the case.

Statutory Factors (Mont. Code Ann. §40-4-202)

Montana courts are required to consider:

  1. Duration of the marriage
  2. Income and liabilities of each spouse
  3. Contributions to the marriage including homemaking
  4. Future earning capacity
  5. Tax consequences
  6. Waste or dissipation of marital assets
  7. Custodial needs
  8. Any other factors for fairness

Common Questions

Montana: community property or equitable distribution?

Equitable distribution. Under Mont. Code Ann. §40-4-202, the court divides marital property based on 8 statutory factors. The default starting point is 50/50, but judges can adjust.

What factors does a Montana court weigh?

Mont. Code Ann. §40-4-202 lists 8 factors. The first three: Duration of the marriage, Income and liabilities of each spouse, Contributions to the marriage including homemaking. The full list is above.

Does Montana split retirement accounts in a divorce?

Yes. 401(k)s and pensions earned during the marriage are marital property. Dividing them usually requires a QDRO (Qualified Domestic Relations Order).

ClearSplit runs Montana's equitable distribution rules on your actual assets and debts.

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Source: Mont. Code Ann. §40-4-202 AI draft · Full law library entry