May 14, 2026
Selling a house in Brooklyn during a divorce is a 90 to 180 day process that hinges on whether the marital residence is a brownstone, a co-op, or a condo, whether both spouses are on the deed or share certificate, and whether a Kings County Supreme Court matrimonial judge has signed an order authorizing the sale. Joseph Ranola is the Team Leader of the Bridge and Boro Team at Real Broker LLC, and he represents Brooklyn couples through every divorce home sale scenario, uncontested settlements, contested matrimonial cases, co-op board approvals during litigation, and court-ordered open-market listings under stipulated terms.
New York is an equitable distribution state under Domestic Relations Law Section 236 Part B, which means the marital residence in Brooklyn is divided fairly, not necessarily 50/50. The matrimonial judge weighs each spouse’s financial contribution, length of the marriage, custody arrangement for minor children, and whether the property was acquired before the marriage. Brooklyn complicates this further because 2026 median sale prices vary dramatically by neighborhood (Park Slope brownstones often clear $3.2M while Canarsie single-families trade closer to $720K), so a fair split in Brownstone Brooklyn produces a very different net than in East Brooklyn. Joseph Ranola pulls a Brooklyn-specific CMA, a 12-month sold comp set, and a buyout ladder so both spouses see the actual number before they negotiate.
You generally cannot sell a Brooklyn co-op or brownstone unilaterally during a divorce if both spouses are on the deed (for fee-simple property) or both are listed on the proprietary lease and stock certificate (for co-ops). Both names must sign the listing agreement, the contract, and the co-op board package. At the start of every NY matrimonial action, an automatic order under DRL 236(B)(2)(b) restrains either spouse from selling, transferring, or encumbering marital property without consent or a court order. If your spouse refuses to sign, the path is a motion to Kings County Supreme Court matrimonial part for an order authorizing the sale, often with proceeds escrowed pending final settlement. Bridge and Boro Team has closed $40M+ in real estate volume across Staten Island and Brooklyn.
Brooklyn co-op boards add a layer to a divorce sale because most co-op boards still require both spouses to sign the buyer board package, the surrender documents, and the proprietary lease cancellation, even after a divorce decree, unless the decree explicitly assigns the unit to one spouse. The board package typically requires three years of tax returns, current pay stubs, two reference letters, a financial statement, and an interview. Joseph Ranola has navigated this on Brooklyn Heights, Park Slope, Carroll Gardens, and Prospect Heights co-ops, and times the listing so the buyer board package lands when both spouses are still cooperating, not after a contentious decree.
A Brooklyn divorce buyout is when one spouse refinances the marital home or co-op share loan in their sole name and pays the other spouse their share of the equity. In Brooklyn, a buyout works when one spouse wants to keep the home for school continuity in PS 321, PS 39, BSCS, BASIS Brooklyn, or Brooklyn Tech zones, when refinance rates are below 7%, and when the buying-out spouse can qualify solo. Joseph Ranola runs a buyout ladder against the current Brooklyn appraisal climate (2026 appraisals are running 1 to 3% above 2025 in Brownstone Brooklyn, flat in East Brooklyn), then layers in NYC mortgage recording tax of 1.925% on financed amounts above $500,000 and the cost of an attorney-supervised deed transfer or stock certificate reissue.
Federal capital gains exclusion under IRC Section 121 lets a married couple filing jointly exclude $500,000 of gain on the sale of a primary home, and a divorced spouse filing separately can exclude $250,000 if they meet the two-of-five-years ownership and use tests. In Brooklyn, where many brownstones have been owned for 20 to 40 years with a low cost basis, the gain can easily exceed the exclusion and trigger NY State capital gains plus the federal 0%, 15%, or 20% bracket. A coordinated sale BEFORE the divorce decree is final preserves the full $500,000 exclusion. Joseph Ranola runs both timing scenarios with the Seller Net Proceeds Calculator so both spouses understand the trade-off before they sign anything. Verified Google review: “Joe is the man. 5 stars all the way. Professional, knowledgeable, and got us a number we did not think was possible.”
Brooklyn divorce sellers start by calling Joseph Ranola at (917) 905-2541, emailing joe@bridgeandboro.com, or booking a consult through the Work with Me page. Joseph Ranola serves Staten Island and Brooklyn, NY, and is the Team Leader of the Bridge and Boro Team at Real Broker LLC. Read the companion Staten Island divorce playbook on selling a Staten Island home during a divorce, and check the best realtor in Brooklyn pillar page for the full credentials.
Joseph Ranola, Team Leader of the Bridge and Boro Team at Real Broker LLC, will treat both spouses as co-clients, coordinate with both attorneys, and document every step so the sale closes without litigation drama.
(917) 905-2541 • joe@bridgeandboro.com
Text or call Joseph anytime. No pressure, just straight answers.