If the prenuptial agreement has a reputation problem, it is largely a product of how it appears in younger marriages — as a hedge against a union both parties suspect may fail, negotiated under a cloud of mistrust. In later-life marriages, the prenup plays a very different role. It is, at its best, a document of clarity: a formal record of two people who came to the table honestly, disclosed their full financial picture, and agreed in advance on how to handle what they each built before they found each other.
For adults over 50 with meaningful assets, children from prior relationships, retirement accounts, real estate, or business interests, a prenuptial agreement is not a hedge against love failing. It is a tool for protecting the people and commitments that existed before love arrived.
What a Prenuptial Agreement Can Do
A well-drafted prenuptial agreement can address a wide range of financial matters:
- Define separate property: Specify which assets each person owns before marriage and ensure they remain separate (not subject to division) in the event of divorce or death.
- Define marital property: Establish how assets and income acquired during the marriage will be treated — jointly owned, separately owned, or some combination.
- Handle debt: Protect each party from liability for the other’s pre-existing debts, and establish how debts incurred during the marriage will be handled.
- Limit or waive spousal support: Define whether either party will be entitled to alimony in the event of divorce, and if so, in what amount and for how long.
- Protect inheritance for children: Establish that specified assets will pass to children from prior relationships regardless of the new marriage.
- Address business interests: Ensure that a business owned by one spouse before marriage does not become a marital asset subject to division.
- Clarify retirement assets: Address how existing retirement accounts will be treated and whether the new spouse will have survivor benefit rights.
What a Prenuptial Agreement Cannot Do
Prenups have limits. They cannot:
- Determine child custody or child support arrangements (courts will not enforce these provisions)
- Include provisions that are illegal or against public policy
- Be enforced if signed under duress, without full financial disclosure, or without both parties having independent legal counsel
- Completely override a surviving spouse’s elective share rights in some states without specific legal structuring
The Process: What to Expect
A prenuptial agreement negotiation typically follows these steps:
1. Both parties disclose their full financial picture. This means a complete accounting of assets, liabilities, income, and expected inheritance. Courts have voided prenups where one party concealed significant assets. Full transparency is both a legal requirement and an ethical one.
2. Each party retains independent legal counsel. This is not optional for an enforceable agreement. An attorney who represents both parties creates a conflict of interest and produces an agreement that is vulnerable to challenge. Each person needs their own lawyer.
3. Negotiation and drafting. The attorneys work together, typically over several weeks, to draft an agreement that reflects both parties’ priorities. This process surfaces disagreements that are better resolved before marriage than after it.
4. Review and signing. Both parties review the final document independently, have it explained by their respective attorneys, and sign — ideally at least 30 days before the wedding. A prenup signed the week before the wedding is much more vulnerable to challenge on the grounds of duress.
How to Raise the Topic With Your Partner
This is the conversation most couples dread more than the legal process itself. A few principles:
Raise it early. The prenup conversation should happen well before an engagement, not after. Introducing it once the wedding date is set feels coercive; introducing it while you are still in the process of deciding whether marriage is right for both of you normalizes it as part of due diligence.
Frame it as mutual protection, not protection from your partner. A prenup protects both parties. Your partner also has interests worth protecting — their own assets, their own children, their own peace of mind. Frame the conversation around building a financial foundation that is transparent and fair for both of you.
Acknowledge the discomfort directly. “I know this is an uncomfortable conversation, and I want to be honest that I have some things I need to address before I can feel fully at peace about getting married. I hope we can work through this together.” This is more connecting than a legalistic introduction.
Be prepared for an emotional response. Your partner may initially hear “prenup” as “I don’t trust you” or “I’m already planning for divorce.” Give them time and space to process before expecting a rational conversation. Return to it.
The Cost
A prenuptial agreement drafted by experienced family law attorneys typically costs between $2,500 and $8,000 total — split between both parties’ legal fees — depending on the complexity of the assets involved and the degree of negotiation required. For anyone with a net worth above $500,000 or with significant assets they want to protect, this is an entirely reasonable expenditure.
What Happens Without One
In the absence of a prenuptial agreement, your state’s marital property laws govern everything. Depending on your state, this may mean that your spouse acquires significant rights to assets you believed were yours — including retirement accounts, real estate, and business interests. It may also mean that your estate plan is disrupted in ways you did not intend.
The prenup conversation is uncomfortable. The alternative — discovering after a divorce or death that the law distributed your assets very differently from what you intended — is far more so.
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