Marital Property Regime: Texas
Texas is one of nine community property states. This materially changes how debts and assets are allocated in both bankruptcy and divorce. Debts incurred during marriage are generally community debts reachable by creditors against community property, regardless of which spouse signed.
Regime: COMMUNITY PROPERTY
Spousal debt liability: TX community property is particularly broad. All property acquired during marriage is presumptively community -- including debts. Creditors reach community property even if only one spouse signed. TX homestead is unlimited and strongly protected.
Timing note: TX post-divorce debts separate; quasi-community rules for move-in debt.
Joint Debt After Divorce in Texas
The most important rule about divorce and debt in Texas: a divorce decree allocates debt between the spouses as a matter of contract law, but does not bind the creditor. If you signed a credit-card agreement with your spouse and the decree says your ex pays it, the creditor can still pursue you if the ex defaults. The decree gives you a contract claim against the ex, enforceable in the divorce court -- but the credit hit and collection pressure are still yours to manage.
Three common Texas scenarios:
- Joint credit card, decree assigns to spouse A, spouse A defaults. Creditor pursues both; spouse B sues spouse A for indemnification under the decree.
- Mortgage, decree assigns house to spouse A. If the mortgage remains in both names, spouse B's credit is still on the line for payment history; refinance is the clean fix.
- Car loan, decree assigns to spouse B. Same dynamic; refinance or pay-off clears the non-taking spouse.
Domestic Support Obligations (DSO) in Texas
Domestic Support Obligations are treated specially in bankruptcy under 11 U.S.C. Section 101(14A). A DSO is a debt that is:
- Owed to or recoverable by a spouse, former spouse, child, or a governmental unit.
- In the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support (without regard to label).
- Established by a separation agreement, divorce decree, property settlement, court order, or governmental determination.
DSOs are:
- Not dischargeable in Chapter 7 under 11 U.S.C. Section 523(a)(5).
- Not dischargeable in Chapter 13 except to extent paid through the plan; any arrears survive.
- Priority unsecured claims under 11 U.S.C. Section 507(a)(1)(A) -- paid first among unsecured claims in a Ch 7 asset case or Ch 13 plan.
- Not subject to the automatic stay for collection from non-estate property (post-petition income) under 11 U.S.C. Section 362(b)(2).
Texas child-support enforcement continues through bankruptcy without stay relief. See DSO priority and treatment.
Hold-Harmless vs True Dischargeable Debt
A hold-harmless obligation in a divorce decree -- "Spouse A agrees to indemnify Spouse B for the Visa balance" -- is itself a debt. In bankruptcy, the question is whether it is dischargeable.
Under 11 U.S.C. Section 523(a)(15):
- Hold-harmless obligations from divorce are NOT dischargeable in Chapter 7. Period.
- In Chapter 13, they ARE dischargeable at plan completion if paid through the plan (they get unsecured-claim treatment unless they also qualify as DSO).
This creates a planning asymmetry: a Texas debtor whose post-divorce debt load is driven by hold-harmless obligations to an ex may prefer Chapter 13 over Chapter 7. See bankruptcy timing and divorce.
Texas Federal Bankruptcy Data
Divorce and bankruptcy frequently intersect: a Texas debtor may file either before, during, or after divorce, each with different strategic implications. These FJC numbers show the Texas consumer bankruptcy volume in which divorce-related debts appear.
Numbers below are from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 30,781 bankruptcy cases from Texas's federal bankruptcy courts.
| Chapter | Cases | Discharge Rate | Dismissal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chapter 7 | 11,844 | 97.8% | 2.0% |
| Chapter 13 | 18,937 | 36.8% | 63.2% |
Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.
Texas Filing Timing: Before, During, or After Divorce
For Texas couples:
File Jointly Before Divorce
- One filing fee, one attorney, one set of schedules.
- Clears joint debt so neither spouse carries it post-divorce.
- Works only if both spouses agree and have compatible exemption strategies.
- In community-property states like Texas, joint filing simplifies the community-creditor analysis.
File During Divorce (Chapter 7 or Ch 13)
- Automatic stay halts non-DSO portions of divorce proceedings (property division); DSO-related portions continue.
- Can complicate divorce timeline.
- Sometimes strategic when one spouse needs the stay against aggressive creditor action.
File After Divorce
- Divorce decree allocates debt between spouses; bankruptcy then addresses post-decree allocated debt plus any hold-harmless obligations.
- Ch 13 preserves ability to pay post-divorce hold-harmless through plan.
- Ch 7 leaves hold-harmless obligations intact (523(a)(15) nondischargeable).
Texas Credit Card Debt in Divorce
Credit card debt in Texas divorce breaks down as:
- Joint cards (both names on account). Both spouses liable to the creditor. Decree allocation is between-spouses contract only.
- Individual cards with authorized-user spouse. Only the primary account-holder is liable to the creditor. Authorized users have no liability unless Texas has unusual doctrine-of-necessaries reach.
- Individual cards, other spouse unaware. Only primary account-holder liable.
- Community property state treatment (Texas). In Texas, during-marriage credit card debt is community debt even if only one spouse signed -- creditors reach community property.
Retirement and Homestead in Texas Divorce
Retirement accounts (401(k), pension, IRA) divided via Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) in divorce. Bankruptcy treatment:
- Pre-QDRO retirement -- generally ERISA-exempt in bankruptcy under 11 U.S.C. Section 541(c)(2).
- Post-QDRO transfer -- the receiving spouse's share is their asset; bankruptcy exemption analysis applies to the recipient.
Homestead in Texas: the divorce court often awards the marital residence to one spouse. If that spouse later files bankruptcy, Texas homestead exemption applies on whatever they keep. See Texas exemptions.