Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen have officially divorced, so many wonder what will happen to their massive wealth. Thankfully, the two reportedly had an "ironclad prenup" before they tied the knot in 2009, making their separation much easier today.

Brady and Bündchen are respectively wealthy. They're icons in their own fields, and both have hundreds of millions to their names. So, how will they divide this?

A source told Page Six they had an "ironclad prenup" set before they got married. Aside from their wealth, they also have their own businesses.

But luckily, their wealth separation comes swiftly because of their prenup. The only thing they have to do now is to divide their massive property portfolio.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers star reportedly keeps the $17 million mansion on Indian Creek Island in Miami. The ex-couple bought it in 2020, demolished it, and it is now under construction.

Alternatively, Bündchen reportedly bought her own house in Miami Beach for $1.25 million before the divorce happened. Sources claim she will use it as an office, so she purchased a larger home in the area.

She also gets to retain their house on the Nicoya Peninsula in Costa Rica, which she and the kids' go-to vacation place.

The two also own homes in the Bahamans and Montana. They also have an apartment in New York, where Bündchen stayed at the height of the divorce rumors.

It's also good to note that the world's highest-paid model is worth $400 million, larger than her ex-husband's $333 million.

Meanwhile, for the first time, Brady talked about the divorce on his weekly podcast, "Let's Go," revealing they had a "very amicable situation." He told his co-host and the sportscaster, Jim Gray, that he understood a lot of people went through different things, dealing with work issues and house problems.

So, he felt grateful that their situation was very amicable. The quarterback later revealed that he mostly focused on two things for now: taking care of his family, especially his children, and doing the best he could to do his job and win football games, stressing that was what professionals do.

Brady further explained that he focuses when it's time to do his job, and when he returns home, he will put his attention on the priorities at his house. "All you can do is the best you can do," he said. So, he added that's what he will continue to do as long as he's working and being a dad.