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Why it's hard for couples to hide their private homes from creditors
The Straits Times
|March 23, 2025
It might look good for couples to hold properties separately as a way to avoid some tax, but do your sums carefully to make sure you can afford such an action.
The key risk arises if either spouse lands in debt and faces bankruptcy action, as creditors can sue for the whole property held by the debtor.
A couple learnt this painful lesson when they "decoupled" from the matrimonial home – transferring it solely to the wife's name – so the husband could buy a more expensive home without having to pay the additional buyer's stamp duty.
What they did not count on was the husband's business failing. That triggered a chain of events that led to his new property being seized by creditors.
Here are three other cases of how creditors went after couples.
WORLDWIDE INJUNCTION TO FREEZE ASSETS
Like a plot straight from a TV drama, a creditor had to apply for a worldwide injunction to freeze a woman's assets, which included four condominium units worth over $12 million in all, so the funds could be used to settle debts.
What made this case unusual was that she was not even the debtor – instead, the husband had transferred all the properties to her as part of their "divorce" settlement.
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