High-Value Property Pool Disputes
Our expert lawyers specialise in high-value property disputes, protecting complex business interests and intergenerational wealth through strategic settlements.
2025
APAC Business Awards
(Family Law Firm of the Year – Australia)
Our Awards
ASSISTED OVER 5,000 FAMILIES






When your separation involves substantial wealth and complex financial structures, standard property settlement approaches simply aren’t enough.
At Melbourne Family Lawyers, we specialise in high-value property pool disputes — matters that go beyond a family home and superannuation to include trusts, corporate interests, investment portfolios, offshore assets, options, and intricate financial arrangements.
In these cases, precise valuation, full disclosure, strategic risk management, and deep legal insight are essential to achieving a fair and commercially sensible outcome.
Our experienced team understands how the Family Court approaches complex property matters and works proactively to protect your wealth, clarify entitlement, and structure settlements that preserve enterprise value while addressing contributions, future needs, and equitable distribution under Australian family law.
Move forward with clarity and confidence.
Your Practical Guide to Strategy, Valuation, and Court Pathways
When significant wealth is involved, separation is not simply about dividing assets. It is about protecting enterprise value, managing liquidity, and resolving risk without destabilising what you have built.
Our lawyers act in complex, high-value property disputes involving business interests, trusts, corporate structures and intergenerational wealth. We approach these matters as commercial projects with legal consequences, not emotional contests.
For Professionals Managing High Value Property Disputes
This service is designed for professionals, founders, executives, investors and beneficiaries of intergenerational wealth.
Your property pool may include private companies, discretionary trusts, equity incentives, cross border assets or related party lending. The challenge is rarely just who receives what. It is how to unlock liquidity, protect control, preserve tax efficiency and avoid reputational or commercial damage.
Where matters are both large and structurally complex, the Court typically imposes tighter timetables, mandatory dispute resolution and disciplined case management. Even when not formally categorised as complex, high-value cases are managed with the same intensity.
Meet Some Of Our Family Lawyers

Hayder Shkara
Director & Practice Manager

Katherine Siotos
Solicitor

Stephanie Hope
Senior Associate

Giuseppe Rubino
Senior Associate
How conduct can shift outcomes in a big pool
Family violence is primarily relevant to parenting, but in rare property cases an adjustment may be made where violence made the other party’s contributions significantly more onerous. This is fact-intensive and not automatic. Serious non-disclosure or fraud can also influence both process and outcomes, including adverse inferences, cost orders, and findings that expand the effective pool.
What counts in the pool in high-value cases
- Trusts and corporate structures Discretionary trusts, hybrid trusts, and corporate groups are common in high-value pools. Courts look through form to effective control. If a party can appoint or remove a trustee, direct distributions, or otherwise exercise real influence, trust assets are at high risk of being treated as property available for division. Attempts to exclude a spouse by amending deeds close to separation can be unwound.
- Business equity and carried interest Unvested options, RSUs, partnership units, and carried interest do not fit neatly into a simple split. The safer path is to classify and value each interest by reference to vesting, performance hurdles, and marketability, then adopt tools like deferred payments, call options, or reallocation of other assets to offset illiquidity.
- International assets and offshore structures The court can make orders affecting Australian parties even if assets sit overseas, but enforcement is a separate question. You may need parallel steps in the relevant foreign jurisdiction to translate orders into practical outcomes.
- Superannuation Super splits in high-value pools often require actuarial input, especially for defined benefit interests and untaxed funds. The court can treat super as a separate pool or mix it into the main pool, depending on the facts and fairness.
- Add-backs and waste Where a party dissipates assets after separation, the court may notionally add back value or account for waste when assessing contributions or future needs.
Valuation, timing, and tax
- Valuation dates The court focuses on present value at the time of hearing but will interrogate movements since separation. Use independent experts for businesses, trusts, art, and collectibles, and expect scrutiny of discounts for lack of control and lack of marketability.
- Capital gains tax and transaction costs Whether to discount for CGT depends on timing. If sale is ordered or likely in the near term, an allowance is usually made. If sale is less certain, CGT may be addressed as a future-needs factor rather than a dollar-for-dollar deduction. The core point is inevitability and timing, not a blanket rule.
- Rollover relief and duty Transfers under family law orders can attract CGT rollover or stamp duty relief in defined circumstances. Secure written tax advice before finalising orders to avoid accidental tax leakage.
- Superannuation mechanics Check fund-specific requirements and factor in tax settings if maintenance is structured by way of super strategies. For very large funds, administrative rules and processing times should be built into your settlement schedule.
Disclosure, tracing, and asset-protection orders
High-value cases live or die on disclosure. Expect orders for production of trust deeds, minutes, distribution statements, loan ledgers, tax returns, valuations, and bank data. If you suspect movement of assets designed to defeat claims, two tools commonly appear:
- Injunctions to restrain dealing with property or to require preservation steps
- Freezing orders in exceptional cases to prevent dissipation where there is a real risk assets will be disposed of before judgment
Where third parties hold key assets or assert competing rights, joinder may be needed so the court can make effective, enforceable orders.
Cost, Confidentiality, and Reputational Risk
High-value disputes demand strategic containment.
These matters are not only legal proceedings. They are commercial projects with reputational and financial consequences. Without discipline, costs escalate and sensitive information can become exposed.
The objective is resolution without collateral damage.
- Protecting commercial interests during negotiations
- Coordinating with forensic accountants and tax advisers
- Structuring outcomes that preserve business continuity
- Using confidential dispute resolution pathways wherever appropriate
How These Matters Are Managed
High-value disputes are tightly case managed. Expect early disclosure, structured expert evidence and compulsory mediation before trial.
Most complex financial matters resolve within 14 to 24 months, depending on disclosure, expert timing and commercial appetite for settlement.
Outcomes are rarely blunt percentage splits. They are structured through staged payments, asset reallocation or carefully engineered settlements designed to preserve value and avoid forced sales.
Protect What You Have Built
Significant wealth requires strategic containment, not reactive litigation.
We focus on preserving value, managing risk and delivering commercially sound outcomes that withstand scrutiny.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Do I Need Legal Advice Even If I'm Only Thinking of Separation?
When it comes to separating, sometimes it is necessary for one party to move out.
The difficult decision in such circumstances may be deciding which person moves out and, if children are involved, which parent they should live with.
This is why we always recommend that you get advice early — even before you separate — so that you are armed with full knowledge of your legal rights.
We can guide you with pragmatic Family Law advice in making the right decisions for your future and that of your children.
What If My Partner and I Are Not Married?
The Family Law Act applies to everyone, whether you are in a legal marriage or a de facto relationship (including a same-sex relationship).
Everyone’s personal situation is different, and only a Family Lawyer can provide the expert advice that applies to your particular separation.
How Assets Are Divided?
How Much Will It Cost?
The cost for a child custody lawyer is approximately $350 – $500 per hour.
The final amount that you could pay for a non contentious matter could be approximately $5000.
For contentious matters, you could pay between $20,000-$30,000 depending on the complexity of the matter.
How Do We Get Started?
Organise a consultation on the phone or at our Melbourne or Dandenong office. We will advise you as to how much we estimate your matter will cost and the next action steps that we recommend.
You will then decide as to whether you would like to proceed with our services.