USFSPA Pension Division · SCRA Protections · BAH · San Diego Military Family Law
By Sarah Chen · Updated June 10, 2026
San Diego is home to the largest concentration of military personnel in the United States. Naval Base San Diego, Camp Pendleton, MCAS Miramar, Naval Air Station North Island, and the 32nd Street Naval Station together support hundreds of thousands of active-duty servicemembers, reservists, and their families. When military marriages end, the legal complexity multiplies — federal law intersects with California family law in ways that can determine whether a former spouse receives a direct share of retirement pay, whether a proceeding can be delayed due to deployment, and how benefits like BAH and base housing factor into support calculations.
This guide covers the essential legal framework for military divorce in San Diego, including the Uniformed Services Former Spouses' Protection Act (USFSPA), the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA), California community property rules as applied to military pay and benefits, and practical steps for filing in San Diego Superior Court.
A civilian divorce is governed almost entirely by state law. A military divorce is governed by a combination of California Family Code, federal statutes (USFSPA, SCRA, and others), and Department of Defense regulations. These layers of law can conflict, create unique procedural requirements, and produce outcomes that differ significantly from civilian divorces — even when the underlying facts are similar.
Three issues drive most of the complexity in San Diego military divorces:
Before filing for divorce, you must establish that California courts have jurisdiction. Under California Family Code § 2320, a California court may enter a dissolution judgment if either spouse:
For military members, physical presence at a duty station in California generally satisfies the residency requirement even if the servicemember maintains a domicile in another state. Courts in San Diego routinely find jurisdiction over military divorces when a servicemember is stationed at any San Diego installation — including Naval Base San Diego, NAS North Island, Camp Pendleton (San Diego County), or MCAS Miramar.
If your spouse is stationed overseas or in another state, California may still have jurisdiction if you are domiciled here. An experienced military divorce attorney can analyze the specific facts of your situation.
Military retirement pay is one of the most valuable assets in many military marriages — and one of the most frequently disputed. The governing federal statute is the Uniformed Services Former Spouses' Protection Act, 10 U.S.C. § 1408.
Yes. California Family Code § 760 defines community property as all property acquired during marriage while domiciled in California. California courts have long held that military retirement pay earned during marriage is community property subject to equal division under Family Code § 2550. The California Supreme Court confirmed this in In re Marriage of Fithian (1974), and the USFSPA ratified the authority of state courts to divide military retirement in 1982.
The community property share is typically calculated using the "time rule": the marital fraction equals the months of creditable military service during the marriage divided by total months of creditable service at retirement. The non-military spouse receives 50% of the community fraction of the retirement benefit.
A common misconception is that a spouse must be married for 10 years to receive any share of military retirement. This is incorrect. The 10/10 Rule under 10 U.S.C. § 1408(d)(2) only determines whether the Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS) will pay a former spouse directly. It requires:
If the 10/10 threshold is not met, the servicemember must still pay the court-ordered share of retirement — but DFAS will not send the payments directly to the former spouse. Instead, the servicemember pays from their own funds, and the divorce decree must include enforcement provisions.
To have DFAS honor a division order, the order must comply with DFAS requirements and typically include:
DFAS publishes specific drafting requirements for court orders. An error in the order can delay payments for months or years. San Diego military divorce attorneys regularly work with these orders and can ensure compliance from the outset.
The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50 U.S.C. § 3901 et seq., provides sweeping civil protections for active-duty servicemembers. In the context of divorce, the most important protection is the right to request a stay of proceedings.
Under 50 U.S.C. § 3931, a court must grant an initial stay of at least 90 days when:
After the initial 90-day stay, the court may grant additional stays in its discretion. The SCRA also prevents default judgments from being entered against servicemembers without the court first appointing counsel to represent the absent servicemember's interests.
While most relevant to debt collection rather than divorce, the SCRA's 6% interest rate cap (50 U.S.C. § 3937) can be relevant when a divorce involves pre-service mortgages or loans that are being divided or refinanced as part of the property settlement.
Military compensation consists of base pay plus allowances — most importantly Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) and Basic Allowance for Subsistence (BAS). How these allowances are treated under California law is often misunderstood.
California child support is calculated under Family Code § 4055 using a statewide uniform formula. The formula is based on each parent's "net disposable income" as defined in Family Code § 4058. Under § 4058(a), gross income includes "income from whatever source derived," and California courts have consistently held that BAH must be included in gross income for child support purposes.
BAH rates in San Diego for 2026 range from approximately $2,700/month for an E-5 without dependents to over $4,200/month for an O-4 with dependents. Including BAH in the income calculation can substantially increase a servicemember's child support obligation compared to a calculation based solely on base pay.
Spousal support (alimony) in California is governed by Family Code § 4320, which requires courts to consider "the standard of living established during the marriage" and "the earning capacity of each party." California courts may consider BAH as part of a servicemember's total compensation when setting temporary or permanent spousal support — even though BAH is not taxable income and not community property.
Military families living on base must vacate base housing within 30 days of a divorce or legal separation in most cases, under DOD housing regulations. The timing of the divorce can therefore have immediate, practical housing consequences. San Diego attorneys handling military divorces typically advise clients to plan for housing transitions well before the divorce is finalized to avoid an emergency relocation.
TRICARE eligibility for a former military spouse depends on the length of the marriage and its overlap with military service — the so-called 20/20/20 Rule and 20/20/15 Rule:
| Rule | Marriage Length | Service Overlap | TRICARE Benefit |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20/20/20 | 20+ years | 20+ years overlapping service | Full TRICARE coverage indefinitely (unless remarriage) |
| 20/20/15 | 20+ years | 15–20 years overlapping service | Transitional TRICARE for 1 year post-divorce |
| Neither | Under 20 years | Any | No TRICARE; former spouse must obtain private coverage |
If a former spouse loses TRICARE eligibility, they are typically entitled to a Continued Health Care Benefit Program (CHCBP) conversion — a premium-based TRICARE-like program available for up to 36 months. The divorce decree should address health insurance obligations, and the former spouse's right to CHCBP enrollment must be exercised within 60 days of the divorce.
California courts determine child custody under Family Code § 3011, which requires the court to focus on "the best interest of the child." Military-specific custody challenges arise because of frequent moves and deployings.
When a military parent receives Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders, they may need to relocate — often on short notice. Under Family Code § 7501, a custodial parent has the presumptive right to move with the child, but the other parent can seek a modification hearing. Courts in San Diego have developed nuanced approaches to military PCS relocation, including:
Many San Diego military divorce agreements include deployment clauses that specify: (1) which parent assumes full physical custody during deployment; (2) whether the deployed servicemember's family members (grandparents, siblings) receive visitation rights during deployment under Family Code § 3103; and (3) how quickly the original custody schedule resumes after the servicemember returns.
The Thrift Savings Plan is the federal government's 401(k) equivalent. TSP contributions made during marriage are community property under California Family Code § 760. Dividing TSP requires a Retirement Benefits Court Order (RBCO) — TSP does not accept QDROs used for civilian 401(k) plans. The RBCO must comply with TSP regulations and specify a fixed dollar amount or percentage of the account balance as of a specific date.
VA disability compensation is not community property under Mansell v. Mansell, 490 U.S. 581 (1989), and is excluded from divisible "disposable retired pay" under 10 U.S.C. § 1408. However, when a servicemember waives retirement pay to receive tax-free VA disability compensation, this can significantly reduce the amount available for division — a practice known as the "VA waiver problem." California courts may consider this reduction when awarding spousal support or making other property adjustments, but they cannot order division of VA disability pay directly.
Servicemembers' Group Life Insurance (SGLI) beneficiary designations are controlled entirely by the servicemember and can be changed at any time. Unlike a civilian divorce where a court may order the maintenance of life insurance for a spouse's benefit, a servicemember's SGLI designation is governed by federal law and is not subject to a state court order. Former spouses who need continued life insurance protection should address this in the marital settlement agreement through alternative means.
The basic procedural steps for a military divorce in San Diego are similar to a civilian divorce, with important modifications:
Not every family law attorney is equipped to handle the federal law overlay of a military divorce. When selecting an attorney in San Diego, look for someone who:
San Diego Superior Court's Family Law Division has judicial officers who are experienced with military family law matters given the high caseload of military divorces in the county. Cases involving active-duty servicemembers may be assigned to dedicated departments depending on scheduling needs.
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