Marital and Non-Marital Property in Maryland

With a few important exceptions, all the property that was acquired during a marriage is considered marital property.

With a few important exceptions, all the property acquired during a marriage is considered marital property. Marital property normally includes such things as houses, cars, furniture, appliances, stocks, bonds, jewelry, bank accounts, pensions, retirement plans, and IRA’s. Marital property generally does not include the value of professional degrees/licenses.

Marital Property

All property obtained during the course of the marriage is marital property, regardless of who paid for it. The exception to this general rule is property received by one spouse as a gift, inheritance from a third party, or excluded by a valid agreement. As stated above, this property is considered non-marital property. Marital property can include real estate, bank accounts, stock, furniture, pensions and retirement assets, cars and other personal property.

Non-Marital Property

Non-Marital Property is any property obtained prior to the marriage. It remains the property of the party who owned it prior to the marriage. Non-marital property remains non-marital as long as it is not gifted or titled to the other spouse.

Any property received by a spouse by gift or inheritance during the marriage from a third party remains the non-marital property of that spouse unless gifted or titled to the other spouse.

Property acquired by the two of you during a period you lived together before marriage is not considered marital property.

If the marriage is dissolved, and one spouse wants to claim particular items as his or her own, the person must have proof that the property in question belongs to him or her alone. A couple may acquire joint ownership in property brought to their marriage by either spouse through appropriate agreements or transfers of title.

Non-marital property is protected from the debts of the other spouse. Each party has the power to dispose of property owned by him or her alone, as if unmarried.

A married person may engage in business, make contracts, bring lawsuits, and be sued in his or her own name. Neither spouse is liable for contracts made by the other spouse in his or her name or for the debts the other spouse may have acquired prior to marriage.

Property that is Part Marital, and Part Non-marital

Some assets can be both marital and non-marital property.

Making a Claim for Property Division

If you and your ex-spouse cannot agree on how to divide your property, the court will decide what is marital property and how much that property is worth.