Selling Your Home During Divorce in Colorado

One clean transaction. No extra decisions to fight about.

Selling a home during a divorce means two people have to agree on everything — and at a moment when agreement is hard. The house is often the largest shared asset, and how it's handled shapes what both people walk away with. We work with divorcing homeowners who need a clean, fast sale with no added complications.

Colorado divides marital property equitably — not necessarily equally, but fairly based on each spouse's circumstances. The family home is almost always part of that calculation. When both parties want out quickly, or when a court has ordered the sale, a traditional listing can drag the process out for months: repairs to negotiate, showings to coordinate, an offer to accept together, a financing contingency to sweat. A direct cash sale removes most of those friction points. One offer, one closing date, one check to divide.

We can work with each party separately or together, and we're accustomed to coordinating with attorneys on both sides. If there's a separation agreement that specifies how proceeds are distributed, we follow it at closing — it's a standard part of the title process. If the court has issued an order requiring the sale, we can move on a court-ordered timeline. We've closed sales in Denver County, Arapahoe County, Jefferson County, and Adams County within weeks of initial contact.

What we won't do is add pressure or take sides. We make one offer based on the property, explain it clearly to everyone involved, and let both parties decide at their own pace. If the house needs repairs, we buy it as-is. If one spouse is still living there, we work around that. The goal is a clean resolution — no surprises, no last-minute deal collapses, and no open houses to coordinate while you're managing everything else.

Common questions.

Both spouses have to agree to sell — what if we can't?

Colorado courts can and do order the sale of marital property when the parties can't agree. If you're heading toward that outcome, a voluntary cash sale before a court order often results in both parties walking away with more — court-ordered sales can limit your negotiating flexibility and add legal costs. We're happy to provide an offer that both of you can review independently and discuss with your attorneys.

Can we sell if one spouse is still living in the house?

Yes. We've handled many sales where one party is still in residence. The occupying spouse needs to cooperate with the closing process, but we work around their schedule and keep the process low-friction. Your attorneys can advise on the specifics of your separation agreement — we just need both parties to sign at closing.

How do the proceeds get split at closing?

The title company handles disbursement at closing. If your separation agreement or court order specifies a particular split, you provide that documentation to the title company and they distribute proceeds accordingly. We don't determine how the money is divided — that's between you, your attorneys, and the court if applicable. Our job is to get you to closing cleanly.

Ready when you are. No pressure, no obligation.

Tell us about your home and your situation. We'll be in touch within 24 hours with a fair offer — and you can take as long as you need to decide.

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Selling Your Home During Divorce in Colorado

Tell us about your home and we'll be in touch within 24 hours.

Or call Quinn directly: 970-710-0151