Important Notice: These calculators provide rough estimates based on Ontario's Family Law Act and Limitations Act, 2002. Actual outcomes depend on asset valuations, excluded property tracing, pension divisions, creditor priorities, and court discretion. Always consult a lawyer for advice specific to your situation.
Net Family Property (NFP) Equalization — Under Ontario's Family Law Act, the spouse with the higher NFP pays the other half the difference. Enter values below and results update live.
Assets at Separation Date
⚠ Include the matrimonial home at current market value. Even if owned before marriage, it cannot be deducted in the marriage-date section.
Spouse A
Spouse B
Matrimonial home (market value)
$
$
Other real estate
$
$
Bank & savings accounts
$
$
Investments, RRSP & TFSA
$
$
Pension (estimated value)
$
$
Vehicles
$
$
Other assets
$
$
Total Assets
$0
$0
Debts & Liabilities at Separation Date
Spouse A
Spouse B
Mortgage (matrimonial home)
$
$
Other mortgages & loans
$
$
Credit cards & line of credit
$
$
Other debts
$
$
Total Debts
$0
$0
Net Assets at Separation
$0
$0
Assets at Date of Marriage
Do not include the matrimonial home — even if owned before marriage, its pre-marriage value cannot be deducted under the Family Law Act.
Spouse A
Spouse B
Other real estate (excl. matrimonial home)
$
$
Bank & savings
$
$
Investments & RRSP
$
$
Pension
$
$
Vehicles
$
$
Other assets
$
$
Total Assets
$0
$0
Debts at Date of Marriage
Spouse A
Spouse B
Mortgages & secured loans
$
$
Credit cards & other debt
$
$
Total Debts
$0
$0
Net Assets at Marriage
$0
$0
Excluded Property (Received During Marriage)
Enter value at time received, not current value. Growth on excluded property is not excluded. Property that became the matrimonial home loses excluded status.
Spouse A
Spouse B
Inheritance & gifts (from third parties)
$
$
Personal injury award (pain & suffering only)
$
$
Life insurance proceeds
$
$
Other excluded (domestic contract, etc.)
$
$
Total Excluded
$0
$0
Estimated Result — updates as you type
Spouse A — Net Family Property
$0
Spouse B — Net Family Property
$0
Equalization Payment
$0

Property division is complex.
Pension valuations, business interests, excluded property tracing, and unequal division claims all require legal analysis.

15 min · Free

Based on Ontario's Family Law Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. F.3, ss. 4–5. NFP is approximate — pension valuations, business interests, and excluded property tracing require professional appraisal. This tool does not account for unequal division claims under s.5(6) FLA.

How this works — NFP Equalization formula

The Formula (Family Law Act ss. 4–5)

NFP = (Net assets at separation)
      − (Net assets at date of marriage, excluding matrimonial home)
      − (Excluded property)

Equalization Payment = (Higher NFP − Lower NFP) ÷ 2

If NFP calculates to a negative number, it is treated as $0. The equalization payment cannot exceed the payor's own NFP.

The Matrimonial Home Exception

Even if a spouse owned the matrimonial home before marriage, its pre-marriage value cannot be deducted. The home's full value at separation — including any pre-marriage appreciation — is included in NFP and shared equally.

Excluded Property (s.4(2) FLA)

TypeNotes
Inheritance / gifts from third partiesValue at time received; growth on the asset is included in NFP
Personal injury — pain & sufferingLost income portion is NOT excluded
Life insurance proceedsLump sum received during marriage
Property under a domestic contractMust be expressly excluded by the agreement

Excluded property that was converted into the matrimonial home loses its excluded status.

Valuation Date

Generally the date the spouses separated with no reasonable prospect of resuming cohabitation (s.4(1) FLA).

Limitation Period Deadline Calculator — Missing a limitation period can permanently extinguish your claim. Select your claim type and enter the relevant date to calculate your deadline.
How this works — Ontario limitation periods

Limitations Act, 2002 — General Rule

Most civil claims must be started within 2 years from the date the person discovered the claim (knew, or ought to have known, that a claim existed). There is also an ultimate 15-year limitation that runs regardless of discovery.

When Does the Clock Start?

Discovery occurs when you first knew (or a reasonable person should have known): (1) that the injury or loss occurred; (2) that it was caused by the defendant's act or omission; and (3) that a legal proceeding would be an appropriate remedy.

Family Law Act — Specific Periods

ClaimPeriodRuns From
NFP EqualizationEarlier of 6 yrs (sep.) or 2 yrs (divorce)Date of separation or divorce
Support arrears2 years per paymentDate each payment was missed
Setting aside domestic contract2 yearsDate of discovery of grounds
Initial support applicationNo limitation period

Personal Injury

Generally 2 years from discovery. Special rules apply for minors (clock does not run until age 18) and persons under disability.

Warning

Missing a limitation period typically results in the claim being permanently barred. Courts have very limited discretion to extend. If your deadline is approaching, consult a lawyer immediately.