Family Law Planning for Separation or Death

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We help our clients to plan for both separation and death. Most people consult a family lawyer after a crisis has already arrived. Whether your relationship is strong, uncertain, or quietly deteriorating, taking proactive legal steps now — before a separation or a death — can protect your assets, your children, and dramatically reduce the complexity and cost of what comes next.

At Soica & Associates, we work with individuals who want to plan strategically rather than react desperately.

Why Plan with a Family Lawyer Before Separation?

The decisions made in the early stages of a relationship or even separation can have lasting financial and legal consequences. Without a proactive plan:

  • Assets you owned before the marriage may be at risk. If separate property has been commingled with family assets over time, it may be difficult or impossible to exclude from your Net Family Property (NFP) calculation. Documenting and segregating assets before separation preserves your ability to claim them.
  • Joint accounts and credit remain exposed. Until specific steps are taken to close or freeze joint financial accounts, a spouse can continue to incur debt or transfer assets — sometimes deliberately, in anticipation of separation.
  • Tax consequences can be managed proactively. Certain asset transfers and financial restructuring steps, done before separation, can reduce the overall tax cost of the process. The same steps taken after separation may be unavailable or treated differently.
  • You may not know your rights. Many clients are surprised to discover what they are — and are not — entitled to under Ontario law. Understanding your position before separation enables informed, strategic decisions rather than reactive ones.

A consultation with a family lawyer before separation begins is one of the highest-value legal investments you can make. Understanding how your Net Family Property will be calculated, what exclusions may be available, what support obligations may arise, and what the realistic range of outcomes looks like gives you the ability to plan — financially and practically — before the pressure is on.

Document Your Assets and Their Origins

Gather evidence of the assets you owned on the date of your marriage and their current values. Inheritances, pre-marriage savings, gifts from third parties, and insurance proceeds may be excludable from equalization — but only if properly documented and traceable. Bank statements, appraisals, gift letters, and estate records are all potentially important. The time to gather this evidence is before separation, when it is still readily accessible.

Consider a Marriage Contract or Review Your Existing One

If you do not already have a marriage contract, it may not be too late to put one in place — even after marriage has begun. While courts scrutinize agreements signed close to a separation, a properly negotiated, fully disclosed, and independently advised agreement can still provide meaningful protection for specific assets. An existing marriage contract should be reviewed periodically to ensure they still reflect current circumstances.

For common-law couples who do not yet have a cohabitation agreement, the same analysis applies — the time to put one in place is before the relationship ends, not after.

Review and Update Your Estate Documents

Your will and powers of attorney, beneficiary designations on registered accounts and life insurance policies, and pension beneficiary designations all require review and updating in light of a potential separation or death. The consequences of failing to do so can be severe:

  • A will that leaves your estate to a spouse you have separated from may still be legally effective if no new will has been prepared
  • Beneficiary designations on RRSPs, TFSAs, life insurance, and pensions pass outside the estate and are not affected by a will — a former spouse named as beneficiary will receive those assets regardless of your current relationship or any separation agreement
  • A power of attorney held by a spouse whose relationship with you has broken down continues to give them legal authority over your financial affairs and personal care until it is explicitly revoked

Understand Your Business Exposure

If you own a business or professional corporation, understanding how it will be valued and treated in a separation or death gives you the opportunity to take steps — legal and financial — to manage that exposure. Business protection strategies may include a properly structured shareholders’ agreement, corporate restructuring, primary and secondary wills, or a marriage contract addressing how the business will be treated. These steps are far more available and effective before separation than after.

Estate planning and spouse death rights in Ontario

Planning for the Death of a Spouse

The death of a spouse during a separation — or while the marriage is intact but deteriorating — creates a complex intersection of family law and estate law that requires specialized advice. Key issues to understand:

The Election Between Equalization and Estate Entitlement

Under Ontario’s Family Law Act, a surviving spouse may elect to receive their equalization entitlement (calculated as if the couple had separated on the date of death) rather than their share under the will or on intestacy — if the equalization amount would be more favourable. This election must be made within six months of the death. If you are the surviving spouse of a marriage that was financially unequal, this election can be enormously significant. Legal advice within weeks of the death is essential.

Rights of a Surviving Spouse on Intestacy

If your spouse dies without a valid will, Ontario’s succession rules provide a surviving spouse with a preferential share of the estate — even if the relationship had effectively ended but no formal separation or divorce had occurred. Understanding these rights, and whether they can be altered by a domestic contract, is important for anyone contemplating separation.

Beneficiary Designations

Beneficiary designations on registered accounts (RRSPs, TFSAs, RRIFs), life insurance policies, and pension plans pass directly to the named beneficiary outside the estate — and are not affected by will provisions or separation agreements unless the designation itself has been changed. This is one of the most commonly overlooked estate planning issues on separation. Updating beneficiary designations should be among the first estate-related steps taken when a relationship breaks down.

Powers of Attorney

If your spouse currently holds your power of attorney for property or personal care, they retain that legal authority until the document is explicitly revoked in writing. On separation, revoking powers of attorney should be an immediate priority. New powers of attorney naming a trusted alternate decision-maker should be executed at the same time.

Domestic Contracts and Estate Rights

A marriage contract or separation agreement can alter the default estate rights that would otherwise apply to a surviving spouse — including rights under the will, rights on intestacy, and the right to elect equalization. These provisions must be carefully and explicitly drafted to be effective. A poorly drafted agreement may leave estate rights unaddressed, with significant unintended consequences.

Who Should Consider This Planning?

Proactive family law planning is particularly valuable for:

  • Business owners with significant assets to protect from equalization
  • Individuals entering second marriages with children from prior relationships
  • Couples with significant financial disparities — whether in assets, income, or debt
  • Common-law couples who want the legal protection that their relationship status does not automatically provide
  • Anyone contemplating separation who wants to understand their rights and obligations before the process begins
  • Individuals with international assets or cross-border family situations
  • Anyone who has not reviewed their estate documents since a significant life change

Costs and Timelines

Initial strategic consultation: Typically 1–2 hours; provides a comprehensive picture of your legal position.

Marriage contract or cohabitation agreement: 2–8 weeks depending on complexity.

Estate document review and updating: Wills and Powers of Attorney, and beneficiary updates can typically be completed in 2–4 weeks.

Pre-separation planning: The time investment is modest; the financial protection can be substantial.

→ Planning before a crisis is always less expensive than responding to one.

Meet Our Lawyers

Experienced family law and divorce lawyers with a reputation for being ethical, practical, and a focus on what is best for the client.

View Our Team
Roxana Soica

Roxana Soica

Founder | Family Law Lawyer

Known for clear legal strategy, calm advocacy, and consistent client communication.
Roxanna Cian

Roxanna Cian

Family Law Lawyer

Known for her genuine empathy and excellent preparation.
Michelle Atalla

Michelle Atalla

Family Law Lawyer

Known for her professionalism and creative approaches to each case.
Hiba Lakhani

Hiba Lakhani

Family Law Lawyer

Known for her strong work ethic, and genuine commitment to achieving the best possible outcomes for families.
Arvind Kaushik

Arvind Kaushik

Family Law Lawyer

Known for his focus, preparation and strategic thinking.
Beatriz Rodriguez

Beatriz Rodriguez

Legal Assistant

Known for her dedication to her work, including excellent communication with clients.
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What Clients Say About
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Thousands of family law matters handled with structured strategy and clear communication

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Ms. Soica is clear, warm and kind. She takes the time to understand my needs and never makes me feel rushed or as if I was a burden. I never hesitate to contact her with questions or concerns.

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Michelle
Toronto
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I have been a client of Ms. Soica for a few years now and I can say that my experience working with her and her team was nothing but amazing. She and her team are extremely knowledgeable and professio...

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Adrian
Oshawa
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Thankfully, Roxana guided us through the necessary steps, providing knowledgeable feedback and ensuring that we complete our legal documents correctly. The communication from Roxana and her team was c...

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Lidia
Toronto
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I had an excellent experience working with Roxana for my prenuptial agreement. She was professional and very clear throughout the entire process. Beatriz was effective and attentive. As a Spanish spea...

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Erika
Toronto
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I had the pleasure of working with Roxanna Soica at Soica & Associates in Toronto, and I cannot recommend her highly enough. Roxanna is an exceptional lawyer, professional, knowledgeable, and truly de...

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Maja
Toronto
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Knowledgeable and detail-oriented, yet also kind and approachable. They took the time to explain everything clearly, answered all my questions, and made me feel truly supported. I felt in excellent ha...

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Raluca
Thornhill
★★★★★

From the beginning, her communication was clear and consistent. She guided us through the entire process, which at times felt overwhelming, but she truly held our hand every step of the way. She handl...

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Victoria
Richmond-hill
★★★★★

Thank you to Roxana and her student for helping me keep the insurance proceeds that were awarded to me. Roxana's research in property and support issues was impeccable. I began the case very stressed...

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Mr. Popa
Toronto

What Clients Often Ask

Can I get a marriage contract after I am already married?

Yes. A marriage contract can be entered into before or during a marriage. Contracts made during a marriage are fully recognized under Ontario’s Family Law Act, provided they meet all the requirements for enforceability — in writing, signed, witnessed, supported by full financial disclosure, and with independent legal advice for both parties. Courts may scrutinize agreements signed close to a separation, but a properly executed agreement made in good faith can still provide meaningful protection.

What happens to my RRSP if my spouse and I separate?

RRSPs are included in your NFP and are subject to Division of Property (or equalization). RRSP accounts can be transferred between spouses as part of an equalization payment on a tax-deferred basis under the Income Tax Act — a significant advantage compared to liquidating and paying tax. Beneficiary designations should also be reviewed and updated on separation, as a designated beneficiary will receive the RRSP directly on death regardless of the separation agreement.

What is the election to receive equalization instead of an inheritance?

Under Ontario’s Family Law Act, when one spouse dies, the surviving spouse may elect to receive their equalization entitlement — calculated as if the couple had separated on the date of death — rather than their share under the will or on intestacy, if the equalization amount would be greater. This election must be made within six months of the death and cannot be extended. If you are the surviving spouse of a financially unequal marriage, this election can be extremely valuable — seek legal advice immediately.

Do I need a new will when I separate?

Yes — immediately. Under Ontario law, a divorce revokes any gift and appointment of executor to a former spouse in a will, but a separation (without a divorce order) does not automatically change your will. If you separate but do not yet have a divorce order, your will continues to benefit your spouse until you qualify as separated under the Succession Law Reform Act. Updating your will should be among the very first steps taken on separation.

How do I protect my children from a prior relationship in the event of my death during a new marriage?

A marriage contract with your new spouse, a carefully drafted will, and updated beneficiary designations are the primary tools for ensuring that assets are directed to children from a prior relationship. A marriage contract can specifically exclude certain assets from equalization and from estate claims by the new spouse. Your will can create trusts for children from a prior relationship. Legal advice that coordinates both family law and estate planning is essential for blended family situations.

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