The Double Dip: When the Same Dollars Get Divided, Then Counted Again
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Most people never see the double dip coming, because it hides in the gap between two different parts of a divorce. The same dollars get counted once when a business or pension is valued and divided, and then again as income when support is calculated. One stream, two bites.
In this episode, Alex Weinberger explains what the double dip actually is, why the valuation method rather than the asset itself determines whether it exists, and how California courts have treated it since Marriage of White in 1987. He works through concrete examples on both the business and retirement sides, separates enterprise goodwill from personal goodwill, and shares the questions that tend to move real money in a settlement.
Whether you're navigating your own divorce or you're an attorney, mediator, or advisor supporting someone through one, this episode shows why the spouse whose team sees the overlap clearly tends to walk away with the better result.
In this episode:
- What the double dip is, in plain language
- Why how you value an asset, not what it is, drives the exposure
- Enterprise goodwill versus personal goodwill, and why the distinction matters
- What California's Marriage of White established about pensions, division, and offsets
- A worked business example and a pension example, both with real numbers
- A practical checklist for spotting and modeling the overlap before anyone signs
If this conversation raised questions about your situation or a client's, Alex Weinberger and the team at Marriage Financial Solutions work directly with individuals navigating divorce, and alongside the attorneys, mediators, therapists, and coaches who support them. Learn more at marriagefinancial.com.
The information provided in this podcast is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. It is not a substitute for working with a qualified professional.
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