The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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wise-stoat-215

Got my settlement check while married — how do I keep it separate from marital assets?

So I finally got my settlement from an accident that happened almost two years ago — long before I ever got engaged, let alone married. The whole ordeal was brutal: months of PT, missed work, the works. Now the check is finally here and I honestly don't know what to do with it.

My spouse and I are in a good place, and I'm not planning for divorce or anything like that. But I'm also not naive — life is unpredictable, and this money represents real pain and suffering I went through alone, before this marriage even existed. It feels important to protect it.

Here's my situation:

  • We have a joint checking account we both contribute to for bills/shared expenses
  • I have an old personal savings account from before we married that only has my name on it
  • No prenup

My questions: 1. If I deposit the settlement into my old personal account, does that automatically make it "marital property" since we're now married? 2. Should I open a brand-new account just for this money to keep it cleaner? 3. Is there any risk of it getting mixed up if I occasionally transfer small amounts out of it for personal stuff?

I've heard the term "commingling" thrown around but I don't really understand what crosses the line. Anyone been through this or know what I should be thinking about? I feel weird asking a divorce lawyer when I'm not even divorcing — is that even a thing people do?

10replies

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10 replies

  • 13
    tidy-wolf-900

    I went through almost this exact thing. My accident was before my wedding and the settlement came in about eight months after. What I did was open a brand-new solo account — nothing else in it, just the settlement deposit. My understanding was that keeping it completely separate and never mixing in joint money was the safest move. Hasn't been tested obviously, but it gave me peace of mind.

    • 15
      brave-elk-473

      The concept you're looking for is "commingling" — and yes, it's a real thing that courts look at during divorce proceedings. Generally speaking, settlement money for personal injury (especially pain and suffering) is often treated as separate property in many states, but the way you handle it after you receive it matters a lot. If you dump it into a joint account, or even a personal account and then start moving money back and forth with joint funds, tracing it becomes a nightmare. A clean, dedicated account with nothing else in it is the most defensible setup. You'd also want to keep documentation showing the settlement was for injuries you sustained before the marriage. I'm not giving legal advice here — just stuff I've seen come up.

    • 21
      silent-grouse-251

      Quick question — do you know how your settlement was actually broken down? Like, was any portion for lost wages or medical bills that your spouse may have helped cover during recovery? That could complicate the "fully separate property" argument depending on your state. Some states treat the lost-wages portion of a settlement differently than the pain-and-suffering portion. Just worth digging into before you assume the whole check is automatically yours to keep separate.

    • 4
      thankful-road-soul461

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 9
    kind-crane-372

    Not legal advice, and laws vary a lot by state — but you're asking exactly the right questions. The general principle in most jurisdictions is that personal injury settlements, particularly the portions tied to pain, suffering, and lost earning capacity, can qualify as separate property. The risk is commingling. A standalone account used only for these funds, with no joint deposits or withdrawals blending in, is typically the cleanest way to preserve that separate-property argument. Worth a one-time consult with a family law attorney in your state — it's usually pretty affordable just to get clarity, and you don't have to be divorcing to ask.

  • 8
    brave-kestrel-086

    Honestly the fact that you're even thinking about this proactively puts you ahead of most people. Just don't let anyone pressure you into rushing what you do with that check — take your time and get it set up right.

  • 10
    quick-tern-006

    It doesn't mean anything bad about your marriage that you want to protect money you suffered for. That's just being responsible. You earned that settlement the hard way. Do what you need to do to feel secure.

    • 0
      kind-parent664

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 19
    gentle-crow-583

    Open a new account. Solo name only. Deposit the settlement there and don't touch it for joint expenses — ever. Keep the deposit statement and settlement paperwork somewhere safe. That paper trail is everything if you ever need to prove where the money came from and that it stayed separate. Simple as that.

  • 7
    quick-lynx-329

    From what I saw working in claims, a lot of people never think about this until it's too late and the money is already mixed in with everything else. At that point untangling it is really hard. The settlement paperwork you received should spell out what each portion of the payout was for — hold onto all of that. It's basically your evidence if you ever need to argue the money was for your personal injuries and not a shared marital asset.