
By Claude Rossouw – CR68 Properties | eXp Realty
One of the most common reasons people are forced to sell property has nothing to do with the market.
It’s divorce.
In real estate, we often speak about the “Four D’s” that drive property movement:
Death, Divorce, Diapers, and Diamonds.
Divorce sits right in the middle — not because it’s rare, but because it’s emotionally charged, legally complex, and often rushed.
And when emotions are high, property decisions are usually at their most vulnerable.
A home is rarely just bricks and mortar during a divorce.
It’s:
Where children were raised
Where memories were made
Where arguments happened
Where one person wants to stay… and the other wants out
Legally, however, the property becomes part of a financial settlement.
At some point, a decision must be made:
One party buys the other out, or
The property is sold and the proceeds are divided
Two people. One house. Zero compromise.
In many divorces, the home is the largest shared asset.
And that means:
Emotions meet numbers
Sentiment meets legality
Urgency meets procedure
This is where things can go wrong if the property process is not handled correctly.
Divorce doesn’t fail because people disagree.
It fails when structure disappears.
From a property perspective, the first questions are usually:
Is the property registered in both names?
Is there a bond, and in whose name?
Is the divorce finalised or still pending?
Is there a court order or settlement agreement dealing with the property?
These answers determine what can happen and when.
In many cases, a property may only be sold:
Once the divorce order is granted, or
With written consent from both parties
Trying to sell before this is clarified often creates delays, disputes, and unnecessary legal costs.
In divorce, clarity beats speed every time.
One of the most important roles I play in divorce-related property matters is being neutral.
I do not take sides.
I protect the process.
This means:
Clear communication with both parties
Transparent pricing and marketing
No emotional manipulation
No rushed decisions that later cause regret
A neutral agent creates space for progress when emotions are high.
You don’t need a referee.
You need a professional.
When a decision is made to sell:
The property is marketed objectively
Offers are presented fairly
Proceeds are handled in line with the divorce settlement or court order
Bonds, costs, and obligations are settled before distributions
This protects both parties, especially where children are involved.
Shortcuts during divorce often resurface later — legally and financially.
Fast exits create long consequences.
I specialise in divorce-related property sales, particularly where:
Communication has broken down
Time pressure exists
Children are affected
One party feels disadvantaged
My focus is not just selling the property, but:
Reducing conflict
Maintaining dignity
Protecting everyone’s legal position
Because while relationships may end, legal consequences don’t.
Selling the home is not failure.
It’s often the cleanest way forward.
Divorce is hard.
Property shouldn’t make it harder.
You don’t need:
Pressure
Opinions
Emotional sales tactics
You need:
Structure
Experience
Calm guidance
If divorce has placed your home at the centre of difficult decisions, know this:
There is a professional way to move forward — without escalating conflict or risking your future.
I’m Claude Rossouw,
CR68 Properties | eXp Realty,
and I help people navigate divorce-related property matters with clarity, neutrality, and respect.