Divorce turns everything upside down.

Your home doesn’t have to be one of them.

We help individuals and divorce professionals understand what’s realistically possible with the home before settlement decisions are finalized.

The home is often one of the biggest decisions in divorce.

Mortgage details are not always as simple as “one spouse keeps the house.”

A divorce agreement may say who gets the home, who is responsible for the payment, or when a refinance needs to happen, but that does not automatically mean the mortgage will work.

A Clear Path Through a Complicated Process

This process is designed to give you clarity before major housing decisions are finalized.

  • Share the Situation

    We review your financial picture, mortgage details and goals.

    You’ll know what’s realistically possible before decisions are made.

  • Analyze Your Options

    We model different scenarios based on lending guidelines and divorce structure.

    You’ll see clear comparisons of your best paths whether keeping, refinancing, selling or buying again.

  • Build Your Housing Plan

    We create a strategy aligned with your settlement and long-term goals.

    You’ll have a clear, personalized plan.

  • Coordinate Next Steps with Confidence

    We help align your housing decisions with your divorce timeline and professional team when needed.

    You’ll know exactly what to do next.

Support for homeowners and the professionals guiding them

  • For Homeowners Navigating Divorce

    Understand whether keeping your home is realistic, how refinancing or selling may affect your situation, and how settlement decisions may interact with lending guidelines before agreements are finalized.

  • For Divorce Professionals

    Provide clients with structured housing analysis that supports informed settlement decisions and helps align expectations with lending requirements, title considerations, and mortgage feasibility.

Settlement agreements establish intent, but mortgage approval depends on lending guidelines, title structure and income qualification timing. Identifying potential gaps early helps avoid complications later.

Questions the Consultation Helps Answer

  • Many people hope to keep the home but aren’t sure what lenders will require or what timing matters most. We look at what may be possible based on your situation so you can move forward with clearer expectations. We will analyze your income, debts, credit, support expectations, the home itself, mortgage requirements and timing to base our conversation on.

  • Many agreements assume refinancing will be possible later. This is one of the most common points of confusion during divorce. We review when refinancing may be required and whether it’s likely to be achievable before agreements are finalized.

  • Sometimes refinancing takes longer than expected, or isn’t immediately available. We explore alternative options so housing decisions remain workable even if financing timing changes.

  • There’s often pressure to make this decision quickly. We compare the financial impact of different paths together so you can choose what feels most sustainable long-term.

  • The earlier housing decisions are reviewed, the more flexibility there usually is. Many people find it helpful to understand their options before settlement terms involving the home are finalized.

  • That’s the goal. The consultation helps identify potential issues early so decisions about the home remain workable after agreements are signed and the next stage begins.

About James

Hi! I’m James,

I’m a mortgage professional based in the Pacific Northwest, and I help homeowners and the professionals supporting them understand the housing and financing decisions that come up during divorce before they are written into an agreement.

Housing questions during divorce can feel especially uncertain. You may be trying to figure out whether keeping the home is possible, whether refinancing will actually work, or what options exist if the original plan turns out to be harder than expected. Just because something is written into a separation agreement doesn’t always mean it will be possible from a lending standpoint. My role is to help you look at those questions early, so you have clearer information as you move forward.

I’ve worked in residential mortgage lending since 2017 and focus on helping clients navigate complex financing situations with clarity and confidence.

Because this is a fee-based service, you can expect practical and unbiased guidance focused on understanding what may be realistic, not pressure to choose a particular outcome.

The goal is simply to help you make informed decisions about your home with more clarity and fewer surprises later in the process.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • No. This service is focused on helping you understand the housing and mortgage considerations that may affect decisions about the home. It’s meant to support conversations with your attorney, mediator, or financial professionals, not replace them.

  • No. This is a planning conversation designed to help you understand what may be realistic before decisions are finalized. There’s no loan application involved or any promise to lend.

  • In some situations, yes! A joint consultation can help both people better understand the housing options available.

  • Most people find it helpful to meet before the separation agreement is finalized, especially if one person hopes to keep the home. Earlier clarity can make those decisions easier to navigate.

  • Yes. With your permission, I’m happy to help provide mortgage-related clarity that supports the conversations already happening with your professional team.

  • That’s one of the most common reasons people reach out. The goal of this process is to help you better understand what may be realistic so you can move forward with more confidence.

  • Because this is a planning-focused service, the goal is to provide clean and unbiased guidance about what may be possible, not to steer you toward a particular outcome. Many find that helpful when making decisions about the home during divorce.

Before you make a decision about the home, get clarity on what may actually be possible.

Whether you are navigating divorce yourself or supporting clients through the process, mortgage planning can help prevent costly surprises.