You’re separating in Australia and wondering how an inheritance is treated in a family law property settlement. Courts weigh timing, use, and contributions to decide whether an inheritance is included in the asset pool. Child support and Centrelink sit under different rules and may be affected differently. Speak with experienced family lawyers early to get advice tailored to your facts.
What an inheritance means in Australian family law
An inheritance is a testamentary gift a beneficiary receives from a deceased estate and it may be taken into account in a family law matter. The legal framework comes from the Family Law Act and decisions of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia.
In practice, an inheritance may be money, shares, real estate, or other inherited assets. A testator leaves the gift by will, and one party might receive the inheritance during the relationship, late in the marriage, or post-separation. How the inheritance is treated in family law depends on whether it formed part of the property pool, was kept separate, or operates as a financial resource relevant to future needs.
Definitions
- Testamentary: arising under a will.
- Beneficiary: the person who received the inheritance.
- Property pool: all property available for division.
- Financial resource: something that supports a party’s financial need but is not divided as property.
A quick scenario: one party received the inheritance and used it to reduce the mortgage on the family home. That contribution made can point toward inclusion in the asset pool, even if the funds were inherited.

Timing of the inheritance in a family law property settlement
Timing of the inheritance is a key factor; the court may consider when the inheritance was received and how it was used when deciding whether to include the inheritance in the asset pool.
Before the relationship: An inheritance received before a marriage or de facto relationship is often treated as an initial financial contribution. If the inheritance was held separate and not used for joint purposes, the inheritance is likely to be treated as a contribution by the recipient.
During the relationship: If the inheritance was used for joint expenses, renovations, or the family home, it may form part of the property pool. Where it was retained in a separate account in the recipient’s name, the court may consider the intention and the degree of mixing.
Received after separation: Inheritances received after separation are frequently excluded from division but may be taken into account as a financial resource that affects future needs and percentage adjustments.
Decision guide
- Received late in the relationship and used jointly → inclusion more likely.
- Received late and kept separate → inclusion less likely, resource more likely.
- Post-separation inheritance → usually resource; can affect overall entitlement.
Common questions about timing
Does the timing of the inheritance change my entitlement?
Yes. Whether the inheritance was received before, during, or after separation can shift whether the inheritance is included in the asset pool or treated as a financial resource.
How is an inheritance received late in the relationship treated?
If the inheritance was used for family expenses or the family home, the court may include the inheritance in the property pool. If it was kept separate, it may be considered a resource.
Are inheritances received after separation counted?
Often the inheritance is excluded from division but taken into account when assessing future needs under the Family Law Act.
When an inheritance is included in the asset pool
An inheritance may be included in the asset pool where it was applied to joint purposes, intermingled with other assets, or represents a large part of the law property available for settlement.
The court may consider how the inheritance was used, the size of the inheritance relative to the overall property settlement, and whether both parties benefited. If the inheritance was used to buy or improve the family home, or to pay joint debts, the inheritance was used for the family and may be included. Where both parties retained their own inheritances, inclusion is less likely.
Indicators the court may consider
- Mixing with joint funds or assets
- Application to joint liabilities
- Documentary evidence of intention
- Proportion of the inheritance to the total property pool
To decide: if one party received the inheritance and it materially changed the family’s financial position, inclusion or an adjustment for that financial contribution is likely to be considered by the court.

Questions on inclusion and division
Can the court divide an inheritance between the parties?
Yes. If it was used for family purposes or intermingled, it can be divided between the parties as part of the asset pool.
What if the inheritance was held in the recipient’s sole name?
Title is not decisive. The court looks at contributions and use, and may include the inheritance or adjust percentages.
Will the court include the inheritance if it is small?
If the inheritance is minor relative to the pool, it may have little impact, though it can still influence contribution findings.
Inheritances received after separation
Inheritances received after separation are often excluded from the property pool, but the court may take them into account as a financial resource when assessing future needs and overall discretion.
If the inheritance is received late after separation and kept separate, the court may consider its availability to meet a party’s financial need rather than include the inheritance as property. However, if the parties anticipated the inheritance or had already relied on it in negotiations, outcomes can vary.
Short table
| Factor | Court may consider | Typical effect |
|---|---|---|
| Timing post-separation | Whether the inheritance was received late | Often resource, not property |
| Use | Whether the inheritance was used for joint costs | Moves toward inclusion |
| Size | Relative to pool | Larger gifts have more impact |
A quick scenario: a post-separation inheritance was used to discharge the joint mortgage before settlement. Even though it arrived after separation, that use might lead the court to include the inheritance or credit a contribution.
Future or expected inheritances and financial resources
A prospective inheritance is usually not property to divide; instead, it may be treated as a financial resource if there is evidence the inheritance will likely be received.
The court may consider whether a party is named as a beneficiary, the testator’s health and capacity to change the will, and whether the expected inheritance is speculative. Future inheritances in divorce settlements in Australia rarely form part of the asset pool, but they can influence percentage adjustments for future needs if the likelihood is strong.
Key points
- Expected inheritance alone is usually too uncertain.
- Clear evidence can make an expected inheritance a financial resource.
- The court exercises discretion on whether the inheritance is taken into account.
Consider a family law matter where one party expects an inheritance soon and has minimal earning capacity. The court may consider the expected inheritance as a resource for that party, affecting the other party’s entitlement.

FAQs on future inheritances
Can an expected inheritance be included in the asset pool?
Generally no. Whether the inheritance is included depends on certainty. It is more often treated as a financial resource.
What evidence helps?
Being named in a current will, knowledge of the estate, and timing indicators can help show the inheritance is likely to be received.
What about a future inheritance as a financial resource?
Where likely, the court may consider it when adjusting for future needs rather than dividing it as property.
Contributions and entitlements under the Family Law Act
The court assesses financial and non-financial contributions and adjusts for future needs to reach a just and equitable outcome. Contributions include initial funds, inheritances, wages, homemaking, and parenting.
Even when one party’s inheritance was used, the other party’s non-financial contributions remain relevant. The Family Court of Australia’s legacy decisions and the current Federal Circuit and Family Court apply broad discretion to determine percentage splits that reflect contributions and financial need.
Contribution categories
- Financial contributions: income, inheritances, capital, debt reduction
- Non-financial contributions: renovations, unpaid labour
- Parenting and homemaking: care, career sacrifices
- Post-separation contributions: mortgage payments, child expenses
To weigh entitlements, the court may consider age, health, care of children, income disparity, and resources. Whether the inheritance will be treated as property or resource will depend on these factors and the timing of the inheritance.

Protecting an inheritance in a de facto relationship or marriage
You can reduce the chance an inheritance is included in the asset pool by keeping it separate and documenting intention; however, outcomes still depend on facts and judicial discretion.
Practical steps include using a separate account, avoiding joint spending, and considering a Binding Financial Agreement under the Family Law Act. Where the inheritance was used for joint purposes, you can still document contributions to support a fair outcome if the relationship ends.
Checklist to protect an inheritance
- Keep inherited funds in a separate account
- Avoid using the inheritance for joint debts or assets
- Record decisions and intentions in writing
- Consider a Binding Financial Agreement
- Seek legal and financial advice early
A quick scenario: the recipient of the inheritance retains the funds in a term deposit, and both parties agree in a financial agreement to exclude the inheritance. That agreement can help the court see the intention to exclude, though formal requirements must be met.
Child support, Centrelink and inheritances
Child support and Centrelink operate under different rules from property division; an inheritance often affects means-tested benefits but may not change child support unless it produces income.
On child support, the question “does an inheritance affect child support Australia” depends on whether the inheritance generates assessable income or changes a parent’s financial capacity. Services Australia can consider special circumstances. On Centrelink, the question “does inheritance affect Centrelink payments” often attracts a yes: lump sums can count as assets and deeming may apply, affecting benefits.
Quick answers
- How to protect inheritance from child support: keeping capital unspent may help, but income produced from the inheritance can be assessed. Get advice.
- Can child support take inheritance: child support is not a creditor, but capacity to pay may be reviewed.
- Does inheritance affect Centrelink: assets and deeming rules may reduce payments.

Child support and benefits FAQs
Does an inheritance affect child support?
Not directly as capital, but income or financial capacity from the inheritance can be taken into account.
Does inheritance affect Centrelink?
Yes, it can affect assets tests and deemed income, which may reduce payments.
Child support and inheritance interaction?
If the inheritance increases capacity, assessments may change on application.
Practical steps before negotiating a property settlement
Taking organised steps can improve outcomes; you should seek legal advice before using or moving inherited funds.
Action list
- Gather documents: will, probate, bank statements, property records
- Map timing: whether the inheritance was received before, during, or after separation
- Identify use: how the inheritance was used or held
- Consider a financial agreement or undertakings
- Obtain legal and financial advice prior to offers
To decide the next move, review whether the inheritance was held separate, whether the inheritance was used for joint purposes, and whether the inheritance is excluded or included based on your facts.
When this may not be the right fit
If your property pool is modest and the inheritance is small, heavy litigation may not be proportionate. If the inheritance was received after separation and entirely untouched, negotiation that recognises it as a resource may be more efficient than arguing inclusion. Where there is a contested will or uncertain probate, waiting for clarity may be better than pressing to include a speculative inheritance.
How to judge if you need this now or later
Proceed now if you are about to receive an inheritance and plan to pay joint debts or the mortgage, because use can change how it is treated. Seek advice now if you are in a de facto relationship and intend to mix funds. You can defer detailed negotiations if probate delays mean an inheritance is uncertain, but keep interim records to protect contribution findings and future needs arguments.
Where this connects to your broader property settlement strategy
Understanding how inheritance is treated in family law helps set negotiation boundaries, manage expectations, and choose between including the inheritance in offers or treating it as a financial resource. Next steps in property division include reviewing contributions, valuing the property pool, and preparing proposals consistent with the Family Law Act and relevant legal precedents.
Frequently Asked Questions
This guide is general information and does not constitute legal advice. The Federal Circuit and Family Court applies broad discretion, and outcomes depend on your facts. For specific legal advice about how your inheritance will be treated, speak with experienced family lawyers before negotiating a property settlement. Call our Brisbane team to book a confidential consult today.


