The phenomenon of spin crossover involves coordination complexes with switchable spin states. This spin state change is accompanied by significant geometric changes such that low and high spin forms of a complex are distinct isomers that exist in equilibrium with one another. Typically, spin-state isomers interconvert rapidly and are similar enough in polarity to prevent their independent separation and isolation. We report here the first example, to our knowledge, of cobalt(II) spin-state isomers that can be physically separated. The reaction of Mo2(dpa)4 (dpa = 2,2'-dipyridylamide) with CoBr2 produces a mixture of two heterometallic compounds with a linear, metal-metal-bonded Mo[Formula: see text]Mo-Co chain. The complexes, SC-[BrMo2(dpa)4Co]Br (SC-2) and HS-[BrMo2(dpa)4CoBr] (HS-2), have identical compositions (Mo2Co(dpa)4Br2) but different ground spin states and coordination geometries of the Co(II) ion. In the solid state, SC-2 undergoes incomplete spin crossover from an S = 1/2 state to an S = 3/2 state, and HS-2 has a high spin, S = 3/2, ground state, as confirmed by SQUID magnetometry and EPR spectroscopy. Crystallographic analyses of SC-2 and HS-2 show that SC-2 has an elongated Co-Br distance relative to HS-2 and is best described as the salt [BrMo2(dpa)4Co]Br. This limits SC-2's solubility in nonpolar solvents and allows for the physical separation of the two isomers. Solution studies of SC-2 and HS-2 indicate that SC-2 and HS-2 interconvert slowly relative to the NMR time scale. Additional solution-state EPR and UV-vis absorption measurements demonstrate that the choice of solvent polarity determines the predominant isomer present in solution.