Selling a Home During Divorce in Illinois
Divorce is hard enough without your house becoming a battleground. But in most Peoria IL divorces, the marital home is the largest shared asset — and figuring out what to do with it is often the most contentious part of the whole process.
Illinois is an equitable distribution state, meaning marital assets are divided "fairly" — which doesn't always mean 50/50, and often requires negotiation or court involvement to determine. The family home, if purchased during the marriage, is almost always considered a marital asset regardless of whose name is on the deed.
You have three basic options: one spouse buys out the other, you list the home traditionally and split proceeds, or you sell directly to a cash buyer and close fast. For many divorcing couples in Peoria, the third option is the cleanest path forward.
Illinois Divorce Law and Your Home
Understanding your legal position helps you make better decisions. Here's what Illinois law says about the marital home:
What Is Marital Property in Illinois?
Any property acquired during the marriage using marital funds is generally considered marital property under the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (750 ILCS 5/). This includes a home purchased together, but also a home purchased solely in one spouse's name if paid for with shared income. Separate property (inherited by one spouse, received as a gift, or owned before marriage and kept separate) is generally not subject to equitable distribution.
How Illinois Courts Divide the Home
If spouses can't agree, a judge applies equitable distribution — considering each spouse's contributions, the length of the marriage, economic circumstances, and whether one spouse is the primary custodian of minor children (courts often try to minimize disruption to children). The judge can order the home sold and proceeds divided, or award the home to one spouse with an offsetting credit to the other.
The Partition Sale (What to Avoid)
If agreement is completely impossible and the divorce is contested, a court can order a "partition sale" — a court-supervised forced sale that is often conducted at below-market prices, involves additional legal fees, and can drag on for months. This is the worst outcome for both parties financially. Most Central Illinois family law attorneys urge their clients to reach an agreement on the home before it reaches this point.
Why a Cash Sale Is Often the Best Divorce Option
A traditional real estate listing during divorce requires both spouses to cooperate on showings, negotiations, repairs, and timing — often over 60–90+ days. When the relationship is strained, this can be genuinely painful and often leads to below-market results because of poor presentation or negotiating with each other instead of with buyers.
A cash sale to Reliable Cash Buyers works differently:
- Both spouses agree once, up front. You accept the offer together and we handle everything else. No repeated showings, no negotiating with buyers, no back-and-forth on repair requests.
- Both spouses are paid at closing. We work with the closing attorney to ensure proceeds are disbursed per your separation agreement or court order — each spouse receives their share directly.
- No condition requirements. We buy the home exactly as it sits. Nobody has to coordinate repairs or cleaning while navigating a divorce.
- Fast timeline. We close in 14–21 days, or on whatever date your attorneys specify. The home is off both your plates quickly.
- Removes the shared financial entanglement. Once sold, neither spouse carries mortgage debt, insurance, or property tax obligations tied to the other person.
What to Do If Your Spouse Won't Agree to Sell
This is one of the most common questions we hear from Peoria homeowners in divorce. If one spouse wants to sell and the other doesn't, you generally cannot sell without their consent. However:
- Document everything. Keep records of your mortgage payments, carrying costs, and any property maintenance — this becomes evidence in court of the ongoing financial burden.
- Consult your divorce attorney about a temporary order. Illinois courts can issue temporary orders to maintain the status quo on property during divorce proceedings. Your attorney can also petition for an order to sell if the home is creating financial hardship.
- Consider mediation. Peoria County has several certified family mediators who specialize in property disputes. Mediation is usually faster and less expensive than court, and is encouraged in many Illinois divorce cases.
- Keep a cash buyer ready. Having a firm cash offer in hand often focuses a reluctant spouse's attention. Call us — we can provide a written offer that you can use in mediation or court to demonstrate the home's realistic market value.
Illinois Resources for Divorcing Homeowners
- Peoria County Circuit Court: 324 Main Street, Peoria, IL 61602 — handles divorce and property distribution proceedings
- Illinois State Bar Association Lawyer Referral: 1-800-662-7660 — find a Central Illinois family law attorney
- Collaborative Divorce Illinois: collaborativedivorce.net — team-based approach to avoid court
- Prairie State Legal Services: prairiestatelegal.org — free legal help for qualifying residents
- Peoria County Mediation Services: Contact the Peoria County Circuit Court Clerk at (309) 672-6049 — mediation services for family disputes
We Handle the Home. You Handle Everything Else.
The decision to end a marriage is hard enough. The house shouldn't be. Reliable Cash Buyers has worked with Peoria IL couples at every stage of the divorce process — from just-separated to court-ordered sale. We're professional, discreet, and experienced in the particular requirements of divorce property transactions.
Both spouses don't even need to be in the same room. We can coordinate with you and your attorneys separately, and the closing attorney handles disbursement per your agreement. Call us at (309) 322-2075 for a confidential consultation.