Advisor in Your Corner
Divorce is one of the most financially complex events a person can go through, and most people face it without anyone in their corner who understands the numbers. Advisor in Your Corner is hosted by Alex Weinberger, a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst and founder of Marriage Financial Solutions, a financial consulting firm based in Los Angeles.
Each episode covers the financial decisions that matter most during divorce: retirement accounts, tax consequences, property division, support calculations, and the hidden costs that often go unexamined until it is too late. The goal is to give you clear, honest information so you can make better decisions, ask better questions, and walk away from the process on solid financial footing.
Whether you are just beginning to think about divorce, in the middle of one, or working through the financial aftermath, this show is built for you.
New episodes released regularly. To speak with Alex directly, visit marriagefinancial.com.
Advisor in Your Corner
Latest Episodes
Protecting Your Children's Financial Future in a Divorce: College, 529s, and Support That Survives
How college gets funded in a California divorce, what happens to a 529 you already have, and how to keep child and spousal support from vanishing if the paying parent dies. In this episode of Advisor in Your Corner, Alex...
Business Valuation in Divorce: Is the Company Really Worthless?
How businesses are valued in a California divorce, why the it is worthless claim is often a low starting position, and how goodwill and a neutral expert reveal what a company is really worth.When a spouse says the business is worth littl...
From Our Money to Yours: The First Decisions When the Settlement Finally Lands
How to manage a divorce settlement: the first financial decisions to make when the money lands. When a divorce settlement is finalized and the money arrives, the early decisions shape the next several decades. In this episode, Alex Weinb...
Should You Keep the House? The Hidden Tax Math of Divorce
Keeping the marital home can feel less like a financial decision than like keeping your footing. It's also one of the largest, least reversible money decisions in the entire divorce, and the number on the spreadsheet usually isn't the real numb...
The Double Dip: When the Same Dollars Get Divided, Then Counted Again
Most people never see the double dip coming, because it hides in the gap between two different parts of a divorce. The same dollars get counted once when a business or pension is valued and divided, and then again as income when support is calc...