When Betsy Goldstein began divorce proceedings at age 53, she found herself confronting a complex web of tax forms, retirement accounts and housing deeds — financial matters she hadn’t bothered with during more than two decades of marriage. As if that weren’t enough, it was 2020, the pandemic was in full force and the stakes were suddenly high.
“I really needed hand-holding,” she recalls. A mediator suggested she hire a specialist — not just a financial adviser, but one trained to handle the dollars-and-cents details of divorce. That brought her to Geoffrey Burroughs, a certified divorce financial analyst, or CDFA. Over Zoom, they worked through her expected ...