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High-Net Worth Divorce in Island County, WA
(360) 331-7101
Island County Family Law: A guide for high-asset individuals navigating divorce in Island County, Washington — and why the attorney you choose matters more than anything else.Request a Consultation
You’ve done everything right. You’ve spent years building something valuable, like a home on Whidbey Island, a local business, investment accounts, retirement savings, real property, and sometimes all of the above. But now, you find yourself at one of the most common, and difficult, crossroads many Island County families find themselves in: divorce.
Once the decision to end your marriage is made, the most important question isn’t whether to proceed— it’s how. Because in a high-asset divorce, the difference between a well-represented client and an under-prepared one isn’t measured in discomfort. It’s measured in dollars, property, and the shape of your financial future.
The single biggest concern for someone with significant assets entering a divorce is straightforward: ensuring that what is yours stays yours, and that what is fairly divided is divided accurately and honestly. Everything else follows from that.
Many people are surprised to learn that Washington is one of only nine community property states in the country. Under Washington law, most assets and debts acquired during the marriage are considered equally owned by both spouses — regardless of whose name is on the account, whose paycheck funded it, or who managed it day to day.
This matters enormously when significant wealth is involved. But community property isn’t the whole story. Separate property — assets you owned before the marriage, or received as an individual gift or inheritance — is treated differently. The challenge is proving it.
“In a high-asset divorce, the question is rarely just ‘what do we own?’ — it’s ‘what did each of us bring in, what did we build together, and can we prove it?'”
Over the course of a long marriage, separate and community property can become deeply intertwined. A pre-marital investment account may have grown with marital income contributions. A family business may have been founded before the wedding but built with both spouses’ labor. A home purchased before the marriage may have been refinanced jointly or improved with community funds. Untangling these questions requires careful legal analysis — and the stakes are high.
High-asset divorces in Island County tend to involve predictable categories of complexity. Here’s where the most difficult disputes arise:
Island County is home to some of the most valuable real estate in the Pacific Northwest. Waterfront homes on Whidbey and Camano Islands, agricultural parcels, vacation properties… all of these assets are often the emotional and financial center of a divorce. Valuation disputes are common, as is disagreement over whether a property is separate or community. A court cannot simply split a house in half; someone must either buy the other out or the property must be sold. Getting an accurate, defensible valuation and a clear legal argument for the property’s character are critical first steps.
If you own or co-own a business, whether a professional practice, a contractor operation, a retail enterprise, or a rental portfolio, that business interest will need to be valued and characterized. Courts look at when the business was established, how it was funded, whether marital labor contributed to its growth, and what a fair market valuation looks like. This often requires forensic accounting. Without proper documentation and expert support, business owners frequently end up with unfair outcomes in either direction.
Retirement assets, like 401(k)s, IRAs, pensions and deferred compensation, are among the most commonly contested in high-asset divorces. The portion earned during the marriage is typically community property, while pre-marital contributions may be separate. Dividing these accounts properly requires a specific legal document called a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO). Errors in handling retirement assets can trigger taxes, penalties, and disputes years after the divorce is finalized.
Brokerage accounts, stock options, restricted stock units, and cryptocurrency holdings all require careful valuation and characterization. The date of valuation matters. A stock portfolio’s value on the date of separation may differ substantially from its value when the divorce is finalized. Cryptocurrency presents additional challenges around discovery and accurate disclosure. If a spouse is less than forthcoming about digital assets, an experienced attorney knows where to look.
Washington Law on Asset Division
Washington courts divide community property “justly and equitably.” In practice, this means property gets divided close to equally, though not always exactly 50/50. Courts have discretion to consider economic circumstances, the nature of the assets, and each spouse’s financial situation.
Separate property is not divided by the court, but the burden is on you to prove that an asset qualifies as separate, and commingling over the years can blur that line significantly.
When large amounts of money are at stake, some spouses attempt to conceal assets, underreport income, or artificially deflate the value of a business. This is illegal but it happens. Red flags include sudden changes in a business’s reported income, unexplained transfers to third parties, deferred bonuses or commissions, and recently “discovered” debts.
An experienced high-asset divorce attorney knows how to use the discovery process. We use subpoenas, depositions, document requests, and forensic accountants to uncover what isn’t being voluntarily disclosed. This is not a situation where a generalist or a low-cost document preparer will serve you well. The financial complexity demands rigorous legal representation.
Washington courts can award spousal maintenance (sometimes called alimony) based on factors including the length of the marriage, each spouse’s earning capacity, the standard of living during the marriage, and the financial resources of each party. In high-asset divorces involving significant income disparities, maintenance can represent a substantial, long-term obligation — or a significant source of financial support, depending on which side of the equation you’re on.
Unlike child support, maintenance is not calculated by a fixed formula in Washington. It is discretionary, which means the quality of legal advocacy directly affects the outcome. Presenting your financial picture accurately and persuasively — whether you’re seeking maintenance or defending against it — requires skilled counsel.
If children are involved, the emotional stakes rise alongside the financial ones. Washington requires divorcing parents to submit a parenting plan that addresses residential schedules, decision-making authority, and dispute resolution procedures. When significant wealth is present, disputes over parenting can sometimes become entangled with financial leverage — a dynamic that experienced family law attorneys recognize and work to prevent.
The goal is always the well-being of your children. A carefully crafted parenting plan, negotiated by attorneys rather than fought out in open court, protects both the parent-child relationship and the privacy that high-profile families often need.
Not every attorney is equipped to handle the complexity of a high-asset divorce. You need someone who understands Washington community property law deeply, who has courtroom experience when negotiation fails, and who knows the local legal landscape of Island County.
At the Law Offices of Andrew F. Scott & Associates, PLLC, we have been serving clients throughout Island County. We work with clients on Whidbey Island, Camano Island, and in Oak Harbor, Coupeville, Freeland, and South Whidbey for the past decade. Andrew Scott has conducted more than 75 jury trials and brings that same rigorous preparation to complex family law matters. We handle the full scope of divorce: property characterization and division, business valuation strategy, parenting plans, spousal maintenance, and post-decree disputes.
We know Island County courts. We know local property values and the businesses that anchor this community. And we understand that our clients aren’t just looking for a lawyer; they’re looking for someone they can trust with their financial future and their family.
The decisions made in the first weeks of a divorce often shape the outcome for years. Early, experienced legal counsel is the single best investment a high-asset individual can make.
If you are considering divorce and have significant assets, there are steps you should take immediately — before any formal proceedings begin:
You don’t need to have everything figured out before calling us. That’s what the consultation is for.
Disclaimer: The information in this blog post is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. Every divorce involves unique facts and circumstances. Please contact our office to discuss the specifics of your situation.
Schedule a confidential consultation with Andrew F. Scott & Associates today. We serve all of Island County, including Whidbey and Camano Islands.
Law Offices of Andrew F. Scott & Associates, PLLC · P.O. Box 86, 5548 S Myrtle Ave, Suite 201, Freeland, WA 98249
Ph: (360) 331-7101 · attorneys@whidbey.com
Disclaimer: Facts and legal circumstances of each client are different. We cannot guarantee the same result in your case. The information on this site is for educational purposes only and does not create an attorney-client relationship.