Community Property in Ohio
State-specific overview · Family Law
Ohio uses equitable distribution; courts divide marital property fairly based on statutory factors, not automatic equal division.
How Ohio treats Community Property
Ohio does not recognize community property. The state applies equitable distribution to marital property (acquired during marriage), meaning courts divide it fairly but not necessarily equally, considering factors like length of marriage, each spouse's contributions, and earning capacity. Separate property remains with the owning spouse. Ohio Revised Code § 3105.171 governs the division of marital property in divorce cases.
The general definition of Community Property
Property acquired during marriage that is owned equally by both spouses, regardless of who earned it.
Community property is a legal system used in certain states where most assets and income earned during a marriage belong equally to both spouses. It doesn't matter whose name is on the title or who earned the money—the law presumes it's jointly owned. When the marriage ends, community property is typically divided equally between the spouses. Separate property (owned before marriage or inherited) stays with the original owner.
Read the full Community Property entry →This page is a plain-English reference and is not legal advice. State laws change frequently. For specific situations consult a licensed attorney in Ohio.