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High-net-worth divorce in Nigeria: the asset-discovery problem.

The hardest part of a high-net-worth divorce is rarely the law — it is finding the assets before they move offshore or into a relative's name.

OBA OLUFON & CO. · Family law benchFebruary 20268 min read
A Nigerian family gathered on a veranda at golden hour.

In a high-net-worth Nigerian divorce, the substantive law of division is rarely the difficult part. What determines the real outcome is asset discovery — locating property, shareholdings and offshore holdings that a spouse has an incentive to obscure before proceedings even begin.

The usual concealment patterns

Assets are commonly moved into the name of a sibling, a company with layered shareholding, or an offshore trust in the months before filing. A forensic review of banking records, corporate filings and property registries — done early, before the other side is on notice — recovers most of what a spouse assumes is safely hidden.

Whoever controls the information controls the negotiation. In a contested divorce, the discovery phase is the real litigation.

Freezing orders and their limits

Interim orders preserving assets pending trial are available but need to be sought promptly and on strong evidence — a weak application alerts the other party without achieving the protection it was meant to secure.

Settling on complete information

A negotiated settlement reached before full asset disclosure is a settlement reached on incomplete information, and it rarely holds up well for the party who conceded early. The discipline of the discovery process, however unglamorous, is what makes the eventual settlement durable.

This note is general commentary on Nigerian legal practice and does not constitute legal advice or create a lawyer–client relationship. Outcomes depend on the specific facts and the applicable law at the time. For advice on a particular matter, speak with the firm.

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