In a divorce, the value of your company becomes contested.
Before lawyers take over the negotiation — document a neutral baseline.
Why this matters
In divorce, the value of a shareholding or business is often a key conflict point. Mediation and court processes usually require valuation documentation. Without a date-certain, neutral baseline, negotiations can stall, positions harden, and outcomes become inconsistent. A documented snapshot gives all parties and their advisors a shared reference — one that reflects business value drivers, not only the balance sheet.
We provide an evidence layer and documentation. We do not provide legal or tax advice.
What the snapshot does
The snapshot creates an indicative valuation range, documents the value drivers behind it, and produces a neutral baseline before negotiations escalate. It is not a certified valuation — it is a first step that lawyers and mediators can use to align expectations and support discussions.
What you get
- An indicative valuation range
- Explanation of value drivers
- Downloadable snapshot report
- Documentation usable in advisor discussions
Next step
Start the Company Value CheckFor lawyers and mediators: share this with your client