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Cohabitation

This project focuses on the financial hardship suffered by cohabitants or their children on the termination of their relationship by separation or death.

Latest news

Following extensive consultation, we published our report to Parliament on 31 July 2007.  The report contains final recommendations regarding the law as it affects cohabitants' property and finances when their relationships end, whether by separation or by death.  It is for the Government to decide whether it accepts our recommendations and, if so, when it will introduce legislation into Parliament to implement them.

The report (1.1Mb) is freely available as a downloadable PDF document.  An executive summary (7 pages) and a press release are also available.

We have received the Government's interim response to our report and Stuart Bridge, the lead Commissioner on the project, has issued a statement.

Background to the project

The Law Commission published a consultation paper (PDF 2.6Mb) and overview (PDF 404Kb) in May 2006.  Press release.

The consultation period closed at the end of September 2006.  The consultation paper set out various provisional proposals and posed a number of questions on which we sought consultees' views.

Key issues

The project looked at people who are living together as a couple, but who are not married to each other or who have not formed a civil partnership (the status available to same-sex couples who register their relationship).

The project concentrated in particular on the following issues:

Scope of the project

In order to keep the project manageable, and to produce recommendations closely tailored to the particular needs of this category of relationship, our work focused solely on cohabitants.

This project therefore did not consider:

We also did not consider:

Useful links

An article by Stuart Bridge, the Commissioner in charge of the project, published in the August 2006 edition of Family Law, contrasting the provisional proposals of Law Com 179 with the recent decisions of the House of Lords in Miller v Miller; McFarlane v MacFarlane. With thanks to Family Law for permission to reproduce the article.

Research examining outcomes for cohabiting couples under the current law, published by the Ministry of Justice.

New research (University of Cardiff and University of Bristol) examining how property issues are currently handled by lawyers following the breakdown of cohabiting relationships.

New research examining the impact of the Living Together Campaign on legally aware cohabitants, published by the Ministry of Justice.

For more information, or to submit your views, contact the property, family and trust law team. Further information is available from the team page.

NOTE - We are happy to provide information about our projects. However, we cannot give legal advice or deal with individual cases. Nor do we help with student assignments.

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