Under Florida law, any real estate acquired during the marriage is presumptively marital property — subject to division in a dissolution of marriage — regardless of whose name is on the title. By contrast, property acquired before marriage, or by gift or inheritance to one spouse alone, may qualify as non-marital (separate) property. Florida Statute 61.075 lays out these rules and adds a further layer: if marital funds or effort were used to pay down the mortgage, make improvements, or maintain the property, that property may have been “maritalized” to the extent of those contributions.

In practical terms, if you and your spouse bought or began using the Naples condo or Cape Coral canal house during your marriage — or if marital funds were used to maintain or upgrade it — that vacation home likely becomes part of the marital estate and must be valued and divided between you both. On the other hand, if one spouse brought the property into the marriage, made no marital-fund contributions, and kept it entirely separate, then that property might remain non-marital — but such cases are less common and often contested.

When a vacation home is part of a divorce, several factors matter:

  • Acquisition date: Was the property bought before or after you were married? If after, there’s a strong presumption it’s marital.
  • Funding source: Did you use joint marital income, mortgage payments from both spouses, or marital assets to pay down the property? Any such contributions strengthen its status as marital.
  • Title and ownership structure: Who holds title? Are both spouses on the deed? Although Florida looks beyond title names to substance, a jointly titled property signals marital involvement.
  • Use and upkeep: Was the property used by both spouses during the marriage for family vacations or rented out as an investment? Both uses show joint benefit.
  • Valuation and market conditions: Florida courts require a fair market valuation of the property at the time of division.
  • Equitable distribution factors: While Florida starts from the assumption of an equal split, courts may award unequal shares based on contributions, economic disparities, duration of the marriage, and other relevant factors.

Practical Options for a Vacation Home in Divorce

Once both spouses acknowledge the vacation home is subject to the marital estate, you have several routes to resolve its fate:

  • Sell the property and divide the net proceeds: This is the cleanest outcome — you liquidate the asset and split the money (after debts, costs, and taxes) according to your agreement or court order.
  • One spouse keeps the property and buys out the other: If one spouse wants the condo or canal house, they may refinance the mortgage in their name and pay the other spouse their share of equity or offset via other assets such as retirement accounts or investments.
  • Continue joint ownership for a period: Sometimes the parties agree to co-own the property post-divorce for a set period (for example, until children finish school or the market improves) and then sell later. Cooperation and clear understanding are essential.
  • Award exclusive use to one spouse: In limited cases, exclusive use (one spouse remains in the property) may be awarded — especially if children are involved and the location helps maintain stability. However, vacation homes are less likely to qualify for exclusive use than the primary marital home.
  • Negotiate other creative settlements: A spouse might keep the vacation property in exchange for giving up other marital assets of equivalent value, or agree to assume all upkeep and tax burdens in exchange for ownership.

Common Pitfalls to Watch

Vacation home divisions bring unique challenges that differ from the primary residence:

  • Unclear contributions: Determining how much marital versus separate funds were used can be contested and requires solid record-keeping (mortgage payments, tax filings, improvements, rental income).
  • Tax consequences: If the property was used as a rental, there may be depreciation recapture, capital gains concerns upon sale, or rental income to consider.
  • Emotional value vs. monetary value: Vacation properties often carry sentimental weight — family memories and traditions — but emotional attachment does not replace the need for fair valuation.
  • Different property types: A Naples condo may have HOA fees and rental income; a Cape Coral canal house may face waterfront maintenance, storm-risk issues, and insurance factors. These cost differences impact valuation and negotiation.
  • Market timing: Real-estate values in Southwest Florida can shift quickly. Deciding whether to sell now or later can significantly affect each spouse’s outcome.
  • Joint obligations: If neither spouse immediately buys out the other, you may remain co-owners temporarily — requiring clear agreements on payments, maintenance, and sale timing.

Steps to Protect Your Interests

If you or your spouse owns a Florida vacation property and you’re heading into divorce, take these proactive steps:

  1. Gather documentation: Collect title and deed information, mortgage history, payment records, proof of improvements, rental income, and HOA or condo association assessments.
  2. Obtain a professional appraisal: A realistic, third-party valuation helps in both negotiations and court.
  3. Track marital vs. separate funds: If one spouse claims the property is separate, evidence such as pre-marriage purchase documents, inheritance records, or gift documentation will be crucial.
  4. Consider timing: Evaluate current market conditions — selling during a high-value period may maximize return.
  5. Negotiate early: Early discussion of property division can simplify later proceedings and reduce emotional strain.
  6. Work with experienced counsel: Divorce and real-estate law intersect in complex ways; professional legal guidance is essential to protect your rights.