Roxana Soica
Founder | Family Law Lawyer
During a marriage, it is common for one spouse to financially support the other — funding education, seeding a business, covering living expenses during a career transition, or contributing to an investment in the other’s name. In many relationships, these transfers are never formally documented as loans.
When the marriage ends, the question of whether these transfers were gifts or loans can have a significant impact on the equalization calculation — and on whether the receiving spouse must repay anything at all.
At Soica & Associates, our family lawyers help clients establish the legal status of inter-spousal financial transfers and, where appropriate, pursue recovery of amounts that were genuinely intended as loans.
Under Ontario family law, the characterization of a financial transfer between spouses — as a gift or a loan — affects the equalization calculation. A loan creates a liability in the receiving spouse’s net family property (NFP), which reduces the equalization payment they may be owed. A gift, by contrast, simply becomes part of the family’s financial history with no repayment obligation.
Courts consider the following factors when determining whether a transfer was a gift or loan:
The absence of documentation does not automatically mean a transfer is a gift. Courts look at the full context. However, the evidentiary burden is on the party claiming it was a loan — and without documentation, that burden is harder to meet.

In many cases, yes — though the strength of the claim depends on the evidence available. Steps that can help establish the loan character of a prior transfer:
Gather communications.
Emails, text messages, and any written communication in which the words ‘loan,’ ‘repay,’ ‘owe,’ or similar language was used can support the characterization. Even casual messages can be persuasive evidence if they reflect a mutual understanding that repayment was expected.
Review bank records.
Transfers from your account to your spouse’s account — particularly those made at the time of a specific identifiable event (tuition payment, business launch, investment purchase) — can establish the factual basis for a loan claim.
Identify any partial repayments.
Even a single repayment — however small — is significant evidence that both parties understood the transfer to be a loan. Bank records showing transfers in the reverse direction, even years after the original advance, are highly valuable.
Consider preparing an acknowledgment.
In some circumstances, it may still be possible to obtain a signed acknowledgment from the other spouse that the transfer was a loan. Legal advice is required before any such step is taken — particularly if separation proceedings are already underway, as an acknowledgment obtained at that stage will be closely scrutinized.
If a transfer from one spouse to the other is established as a loan, it appears as a liability in the receiving spouse’s NFP calculation, reducing their net property value. This directly affects the equalization payment — meaning the lending spouse is effectively repaid through the equalization process, rather than through a direct repayment order.
In some cases, it may also be possible to seek a direct order for repayment of a loan as part of the family law proceedings — treating the inter-spousal loan as a separate debt claim, in addition to or instead of its treatment within the NFP framework. The appropriate approach depends on the specific circumstances, the strength of the evidence, and the overall financial picture of both spouses.

If you are providing financial support to your spouse — for education, a business, or any other purpose — and intend for it to be repayable, the following steps protect your position:
Use a written promissory note.
A simple, signed promissory note setting out the amount, the purpose, the interest rate (if any), and the repayment terms is the most effective documentation of a loan. It creates a clear, enforceable record and leaves no room for a later dispute about whether repayment was expected.
Keep transfers separate.
Transfer the funds from your personal account to your spouse’s personal account, with a clear reference noting the purpose of the transfer. Avoid depositing into a joint account where possible, as joint account deposits are more difficult to characterize as loans to one spouse.
Record any repayments.
If repayments are made, keep records — bank transfers, receipts, or written acknowledgments. A history of even partial repayment strongly supports the loan characterization and demonstrates that both parties understood the arrangement.
Address it in your marriage contract.
A marriage contract can include a provision acknowledging and protecting specific inter-spousal loans — providing the strongest possible legal protection. If you are lending significant sums, a marriage contract provision is the gold standard.
Establishing the loan character of a prior transfer involves a legal analysis of the available evidence, followed by either inclusion of the loan in equalization negotiations or, if necessary, a motion before the court.
Acting early — before separation proceedings are well advanced — is significantly more cost-effective and produces stronger results. If you have recently separated and have significant undocumented transfers outstanding, obtaining legal advice promptly is important.
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In most cases, spousal loans are addressed through the equalization calculation rather than through a separate civil lawsuit. The loan appears as a liability in the receiving spouse’s NFP, reducing the equalization they are owed. In some circumstances, a direct debt claim can also be pursued — particularly where there is a formal promissory note. The best approach depends on the amounts involved and the overall financial picture.
Pre-marriage loans are generally treated differently from loans made during the marriage. A pre-marriage loan would appear as a liability in the receiving spouse’s opening balance (the valuation date of marriage), which affects how the NFP calculation works. Documentation of the loan and its terms is equally important regardless of when it was made.
Yes, significantly. A transfer made to your spouse’s individual account for their individual purpose is much more likely to be characterized as a loan than a transfer into a joint account or an investment made jointly. The more the transfer benefits both spouses jointly, the harder it is to establish as a loan to one of them.
The Child Support Guidelines table — sometimes informally called a calculator — is used to determine the base level of child support based on the paying parent’s income and the number of children. It is a separate calculation from the equalization of net family property and has nothing to do with inter-spousal loans. Child support is determined independently of division of property.
A separation agreement is a negotiated contract between separating spouses that addresses division of property, support, and parenting arrangements. Both parties should obtain independent legal advice before signing. At Soica & Associates, we can help you negotiate, draft, and finalize a separation agreement that properly addresses all outstanding financial issues, including any inter-spousal loans.
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