Colorado Equity Buyout & Separate-Property Appreciation Planning
May 07, 2026How divorcing Coloradans apply the Balanson rule — separate property appreciation during marriage is marital — to Front Range home values, structure equity buyouts that fund, and qualify under the 2014 Maintenance Act — and why a Certified Divorce Lending Professional (CDLP®) belongs at the planning table alongside your family law attorney.
The Colorado Buyout Problem Most Couples Miss
When a Colorado couple divorces and one spouse wants to keep the marital home, the conversation almost always centers on a single number: the equity buyout. Half the equity. Refinance, write a check, transfer the deed, and move on.
That framing misses Colorado's distinctive appreciation rule. Most equitable distribution states treat appreciation of separate property as separate property. Colorado doesn't. Under In re Marriage of Balanson and C.R.S. § 14-10-113(4), the increase in value of separate property during the marriage is itself marital property — divided equitably alongside everything else acquired during the marriage. On a Front Range home that doubled in value during a long marriage, this rule moves hundreds of thousands of dollars from the "separate" column to the "marital" column.
That's why equity buyout planning in Colorado is really two planning exercises running in parallel: equitable distribution under C.R.S. § 14-10-113 (multi-factor analysis, no presumption of 50/50 but equal is common), and the Balanson appreciation calculation for any pre-marital home. Most family law attorneys handle the first beautifully. Few coordinate the appreciation math with the actual financing required to fund a buyout that includes the marital share of separate-property appreciation. That's where a CDLP® comes in.
What an Equity Buyout Actually Means in a Colorado Divorce
An equity buyout is the mechanism by which one spouse purchases the other spouse's marital interest in the home, allowing one spouse to keep the property and the other to receive their share in cash, debt reduction, or another asset.
Colorado is an equitable distribution state under C.R.S. § 14-10-113. Marital property is divided equitably — usually but not always equally — based on contributions, value of separate property set apart to each spouse, economic circumstances, and any change in value of separate property during the marriage. Colorado is no-fault — the legal threshold is irretrievable breakdown — and requires 91 days from filing/service before a decree can be entered.
The buyout is also where mortgage qualification meets two Colorado-specific complications. The Balanson rule makes appreciation of separate property part of the marital estate — frequently a six-figure swing on long-held Front Range homes. And Colorado's 2014 Maintenance Act introduced an advisory formula tied to income and length of marriage, making qualifying income more predictable than in pure-discretion states. The combination — appreciation that increases the buyout AND maintenance that may help qualify for the financing — has to be modeled together, not separately.
Colorado's Balanson Rule: Separate-Property Appreciation Is Marital
Most states classify property by source: pre-marital, gift, inheritance is separate; everything acquired during marriage is marital. Appreciation generally follows the underlying asset — separate stays separate, marital stays marital. Colorado departs from that rule.
Under In re Marriage of Balanson and C.R.S. § 14-10-113(4), the increase in value of separate property during the marriage is itself marital property. The home your spouse owned before marriage stays separate. The appreciation during the marriage becomes marital — divided equitably alongside everything else acquired during the marriage.
On Front Range homes — Denver, Boulder, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs — values have appreciated dramatically over the past decade. A pre-marital home purchased for $300,000 in 2010 might be worth $850,000 today. Under Balanson, the $550,000 of appreciation during marriage is the marital component — divided equitably between the spouses. The non-titled spouse's claim against that appreciation can easily run into $200,000–$300,000. Colorado courts use the Foster formula or similar apportionment in some cases to calculate the marital share precisely. Most divorcing Coloradans, and many family law attorneys outside CO, miss the Balanson rule entirely.
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WHAT BALANSON DOES TO A COLORADO BUYOUT Tom owned a Boulder home worth $340,000 when he married Anna in 2012. He had a $230,000 mortgage at marriage. They divorced in 2026 with the home worth $920,000 and the mortgage paid down to $145,000. The home was always titled solely in Tom's name and was therefore separate property at acquisition. Without Balanson, Anna might be told she has no claim on the home. The deed has only Tom's name; the home was acquired before marriage. The buyout could close at $0 to Anna from this asset. Under Balanson and § 14-10-113(4): the increase in value during marriage — $920,000 less the $340,000 starting value = $580,000 — is marital property. Equitable distribution analysis (a 14-year marriage with both spouses contributing meaningfully) likely allocates the marital appreciation roughly 50/50, giving Anna a $290,000 marital claim. Tom's refinance has to be sized to fund that. Without Balanson analysis, Anna walks away from $290,000 of recoverable value. With it, the buyout reflects what Colorado law actually provides. |
If the separation agreement is silent on Balanson, the marital share of separate-property appreciation defaults to whatever the parties negotiated based on incorrect assumptions about how appreciation works. This is one of the most consequential financial issues in Colorado divorces involving pre-marital homes — addressing it requires precise documentation and computation before the agreement is signed.
Colorado-Specific Buyout Structures
Colorado divorces use several common buyout structures. Each has different implications for cash flow, lender qualification, tax treatment, and timing.
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Cash-out refinance buyout |
The keeping spouse refinances the mortgage in their name alone, pulling out enough equity to pay the leaving spouse their marital share — including any Balanson-calculated appreciation claim. The dominant Colorado structure when the keeping spouse can qualify post-divorce. |
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Rate-and-term refinance + non-housing asset offset |
The keeping spouse refinances solely to remove the leaving spouse from the loan (no cash out), and the leaving spouse is paid their share from retirement accounts, brokerage assets, or other marital property. Often easier to qualify for than a cash-out — particularly relevant on high-value Front Range homes. |
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Balanson-adjusted structured note |
When the appreciation claim is large but the keeping spouse cannot fund it immediately, a structured note pays the leaving spouse over time. Lenders treat secured notes carefully — improper structuring affects future qualification. |
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Deferred sale |
Both spouses retain ownership and the home is sold at a future triggering event, typically minor child's high-school graduation. Less common in Colorado but available. Creates ongoing co-ownership obligations. |
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Sale and split |
Neither spouse keeps the home. Sold and net proceeds are divided per the Balanson- and § 14-10-113-adjusted apportionment. Sometimes the right answer when Colorado's high prices make either spouse keeping the home financially impractical. |
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Loan assumption (FHA/VA only) |
When the existing loan is FHA or VA, the keeping spouse may be able to assume the loan rather than refinance — preserving a low rate. Particularly valuable on Colorado's high loan amounts. Conventional loans are not assumable. |
The right structure depends on the Balanson-included buyout figure and what the keeping spouse can actually finance. Skipping appreciation analysis on a pre-marital home means the buyout is sized off the wrong number — and Front Range home values make that error particularly expensive.
Why a CDLP® Belongs on Your Colorado Divorce Team
The Certified Divorce Lending Professional (CDLP®) designation is issued by the Divorce Lending Association, LLC — the parent organization of DivorceHousing.com. CDLP® professionals complete rigorous training in the intersection of family law, mortgage finance, tax treatment of divorce-related transfers, and the practical mechanics of structuring buyouts that actually close.
A CDLP® is not a replacement for your family law attorney. They are a complement — the financial-side specialist who works directly with your attorney to make sure the deal you negotiate is the deal that actually funds.
What a CDLP® Brings to a Colorado Divorce
- Pre-agreement mortgage capacity review. Before settlement terms are negotiated, a CDLP® analyzes whether the keeping spouse can qualify for the financing the buyout requires — using post-divorce income (maintenance and child support), post-divorce debts, and current Colorado lender guidelines.
- Balanson appreciation modeling. CDLP® professionals work with your attorney to assemble Balanson inputs (purchase price, value at marriage, current FMV) and run the appreciation calculation so the buyout is priced on real numbers, not assumed splits.
- Mortgage-friendly separation agreement language. Colorado lenders need specific phrasing in the separation agreement regarding maintenance, child support, refinance deadlines, Balanson findings, and contingent liability removal. Vague language causes preventable underwriting denials.
- 2014 Maintenance Act qualification analysis. Colorado's advisory maintenance formula provides predictable dollar figures, but duration is still discretionary. A CDLP® models whether negotiated maintenance clears the lender's three-year continuation threshold.
- Refinance timing aligned to dissolution deadlines. Colorado decrees commonly impose 60-, 90-, or 180-day refinance deadlines. CDLP® professionals work backward from those dates to ensure the financing closes on time.
- Front Range high-value financing. Median home prices on the Front Range create large refinance loan amounts. A CDLP® coordinates with lenders comfortable with jumbo and high-balance loans on Colorado's specific markets.
- Tax-aware structuring. Equity buyouts are generally non-taxable transfers under IRC § 1041 when made incident to divorce. A CDLP® coordinates with your CPA so no avoidable tax exposure is created — particularly relevant on high-value Colorado homes.
Common Colorado Buyout Pitfalls We See
Patterns repeat across Colorado divorce cases that arrive at our desk post-decree. Most are preventable with planning before the separation agreement is signed.
- Balanson is skipped on pre-marital homes. Treating a pre-marital home as fully separate ignores the marital share of appreciation under § 14-10-113(4). The non-titled spouse can lose hundreds of thousands of dollars of recoverable value.
- Balanson math uses the wrong inputs. The calculation requires the home's value at the date of marriage (not purchase) and current FMV. Estimating these instead of documenting them produces figures that won't survive scrutiny.
- Maintenance duration is too short to qualify as income. Colorado's advisory formula sets dollar amounts; duration is negotiated. Maintenance orders without a documented three-year continuation disqualify that income from the keeping spouse's refinance.
- The buyout exceeds the keeping spouse's qualification capacity. Front Range home values make Balanson-included buyouts large. Without pre-qualification, the agreement obligates a buyout the keeping spouse cannot fund.
- The buyout is sized off Zillow, not an appraisal. Appraised value drives lender LTV. On Colorado's volatile market, a 5–10% gap between estimate and appraisal can collapse the buyout structure.
- Refinance deadline is shorter than processing time. A 30- or 45-day deadline rarely accommodates appraisal, underwriting, and closing on a high-value Colorado refinance.
- The leaving spouse stays liable on the original mortgage. A deed transfer does not remove a borrower from the note. Without a refinance or assumption, the leaving spouse remains personally liable.
The Right Order of Operations
For Colorado divorces involving the marital home, the planning sequence matters as much as any individual decision. The right order:
- Engage a Colorado CDLP® before settlement terms are finalized. A capacity review takes about 20–30 minutes and tells you what is actually financeable.
- Run the Balanson analysis on any separate-property home. Pull purchase records, value at the date of marriage, current FMV. Calculate the marital share of appreciation before any buyout figure is negotiated.
- Run the maintenance formula and check duration. Use the 2014 Maintenance Act advisory formula to model dollar amount; negotiate duration to clear the lender's three-year threshold.
- Choose the buyout structure. Cash-out refinance, rate-and-term plus non-housing asset offset, structured note, deferred sale, sale and split, or FHA/VA assumption — chosen based on what the keeping spouse can actually qualify for under the Balanson-included figure.
- Draft mortgage-friendly separation agreement language. The CDLP® works with your family law attorney to include specific refinance deadlines, maintenance language that clears lender requirements, contingent-liability treatment, and Balanson findings.
- Pre-qualify the keeping spouse. Before the separation agreement is signed, have a Colorado-experienced lender pre-qualify the keeping spouse against the contemplated post-divorce income and debt picture.
- Sign the separation agreement and pursue the dissolution decree. Knowing the financing closes is the difference between a settled divorce and one that returns to court within a year.
Talk to a Colorado CDLP® Before You Sign
A free 20-minute mortgage capacity review tells you exactly what the buyout structure should look like, whether the keeping spouse can qualify, and how the Balanson rule actually scores on your facts. The earlier in the process, the more options remain on the table.
Related: Colorado Divorce Mortgage & Housing Solutions Overview · Find a CDLP® Near You
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LEGAL DISCLAIMER This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, mortgage, or real estate advice. Equitable distribution in Colorado is governed by C.R.S. § 14-10-113, including § 14-10-113(4) addressing the increase in value of separate property during marriage. Apportionment of separate-property appreciation derives from In re Marriage of Balanson, 25 P.3d 28 (Colo. 2001), and its progeny. Maintenance is governed by C.R.S. § 14-10-114, including the 2014 Maintenance Act and its advisory formula. Mortgage qualification, maintenance treatment as qualifying income, and lender-specific underwriting guidelines vary and change over time. Buyout structures, tax consequences, refinance timing, and outcomes depend on individual facts and applicable law at the time of the transaction. Readers should consult a licensed Colorado family law attorney, a Certified Divorce Lending Professional (CDLP®), a CPA or tax advisor, and a Colorado-licensed mortgage professional before making any financial, legal, or housing decisions in connection with a divorce or property transfer. Neither DivorceHousing.com nor the Divorce Lending Association, LLC, its members, employees, or affiliates make any warranty, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, completeness, or applicability of the information in this article to any particular situation. CDLP® is a registered designation of the Divorce Lending Association, LLC. |
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