How Do Nebraskans Prove Their Actual Standard of Living in a Divorce?
A tax return may not show the complete financial picture in a Nebraska divorce. Learn how bank records, business documents, budgets, expert analysis, and local disclosure rules may help establish actual cash flow and the marital standard of living.
How Can a Business Valuation Be Manipulated in a Nebraska Divorce?
A closely held business can be one of the largest and most difficult assets to evaluate in a Nebraska divorce. This guide explains active appreciation, goodwill, valuation dates, financial warning signs, and the discovery tools lawyers use to investigate the numbers.
How Are Railroad Retirement Benefits Divided in a Nebraska Divorce?
Railroad retirement benefits do not follow the same rules as an ordinary pension or 401(k). Learn how Nebraska divorce law treats Tier I and Tier II benefits, what the Railroad Retirement Board requires, and how railroad schedules may affect parenting plans.
Are Alimony Payments Taxable in Nebraska?
Alimony tax treatment in Nebraska depends on the divorce or separation instrument, later modifications, filing status, and how support interacts with property division and child-related tax benefits. This guide explains the post-2018 rule, older-order traps, Nebraska timing issues, and practical settlement considerations.
How Does a Constantly Traveling Work Schedule Affect Child Custody in Nebraska?
If your job keeps you on the road, your Nebraska custody case depends on more than your work schedule. A strong parenting plan must protect your child’s safety, school routine, stability, and relationship with both parents where appropriate. Zachary W. Anderson Law helps Nebraska parents build practical custody and parenting-time plans for real-world work schedules, including travel-heavy jobs, rotating shifts, and relocation concerns.
Is My Deferred Comp, Bonus, or “Phantom Income” Marital Property in a Nebraska Divorce?
Deferred compensation, performance bonuses, stock options, RSUs, business interests, and pass-through “phantom income” can make Nebraska divorce property division and support issues significantly more complex. Zachary W. Anderson Law helps clients identify what may be marital, what may be separate, what records matter, and how business valuation, support, and co-parenting issues fit together.
What Happens to the Goodwill of My Business in a Nebraska Divorce?
Business goodwill can be one of the most valuable and disputed parts of a Nebraska divorce involving a closely held business, professional practice, farm operation, or family company. This article explains how Nebraska courts distinguish transferable enterprise goodwill from personal goodwill, how premarital business growth may become marital through active appreciation, and how business value can often be divided through offsets, buyouts, or structured payments.
What Financial Moves Should I Make Before Filing for Divorce in Nebraska?
Before filing for divorce in Nebraska, smart financial preparation means documenting records, preserving ordinary expenses, avoiding risky self-help transfers, and getting advice before moving significant money or property. This guide explains how Nebraska courts generally approach marital and nonmarital property, dissipation, premarital real estate under Stava, retirement division, temporary orders, child support, filing costs, and Parenting Act requirements.
What Happens to Stock Options, RSUs, and Unvested Equity in a Nebraska Divorce?
Stock options, RSUs, and other unvested equity can be difficult to divide because their value and availability may depend on future employment, vesting conditions, taxes, and market performance. This guide explains how Nebraska courts may classify and divide equity compensation, what documents matter, and why the terms of the divorce decree require careful attention.
How Do We Split Our Brokerage Account in a Nebraska Divorce Without Getting Hit With a Surprise Tax Bill?
Dividing a brokerage account in a Nebraska divorce is not always as simple as splitting the account balance. This article explains how carryover basis, built-in capital gains, in-kind transfers, and Nebraska equitable-division rules can affect the real value of investment accounts during divorce.
What Is a “Fair” Divorce Settlement in Nebraska?
A fair divorce settlement in Nebraska does not always mean a perfect 50/50 split. Nebraska courts focus on equitable distribution, which means dividing marital property and debts in a way that is reasonable under the facts of the case. This article explains what “fair” really means in a Nebraska divorce, how property division, retirement accounts, alimony, child support, and parenting plans are treated, and why a workable “fair enough” settlement can sometimes protect your future better than chasing a perfect result through prolonged litigation.
How Does Nebraska Divide a Family Farm or Business in a Divorce?
Dividing a family farm or closely held business in a Nebraska divorce is rarely as simple as splitting everything in half. This article explains how Nebraska courts separate marital from nonmarital property, why active versus passive appreciation can make a major difference, how farms and businesses are valued, and what the recent Nebraska Court of Appeals decision in Jeffers v. Jeffers means for real-world divorce cases involving land, corporations, and family operations. It is written to help readers understand the law in plain English while giving them a practical sense of what actually matters when these assets are at stake.
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