Abogados de Prenups & Marital Agreements
676 abogados de Prenups & Marital Agreements encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Law Offices of Jeff Grandjean

Petersen Legal

Jeffrey Alan Price, Attorney at Law

Rollman Legal

Rollman & Partners

Runge & Associates

Hale Legal

The Wray Firm

Law Offices of Jennifer Ani

Evans Legal

Milne Injury Lawyers

Jennifer Kane Waterway, Attorney at Law

Law Offices of Jennifer Pope

Ramos Legal

Miller-Morse Trial Lawyers

Lacoste Trial Lawyers
Prenups and Marital Agreements Lawyers Across the United States
A prenuptial agreement is a legally binding contract between two people before they marry. It spells out how assets, debts, and financial responsibilities will be handled during the marriage and in the event of divorce. About 15% of married couples in the U.S. now have a prenup, and that number has been rising steadily among younger generations.
What Prenups and Marital Agreements Cover
Prenuptial agreements address the division of property, business interests, retirement accounts, and real estate. They can also determine whether one spouse will pay spousal support and under what conditions. Debt allocation is another common provision — protecting one partner from the other's pre-existing financial obligations.
Postnuptial agreements work the same way but are signed after a couple is already married. Some couples also use marital agreements to define financial roles during the marriage itself, such as how joint bank accounts and household expenses are managed.
When to Hire a Prenup or Marital Agreement Lawyer
- You own a business, property, or significant assets before the marriage
- One or both partners carry substantial debt, such as student loans
- You want to protect an inheritance or family wealth for children from a prior relationship
- You and your spouse want to create or modify a postnuptial agreement after a major financial change
- Your partner has presented a prenup and you need independent legal review
How the Process Works
Each party should retain their own attorney. Courts frequently invalidate agreements where one side had no independent counsel. Both partners provide full financial disclosure, listing all assets, income, and debts.
The attorneys then draft and negotiate terms that both parties find acceptable. Most prenups are finalized within 30 to 90 days, though complex estates can take longer. Courts in every state require that the agreement be signed voluntarily — coercion or last-minute pressure can render a prenup unenforceable.
How Financial Outcomes Are Determined
- Separate property brought into the marriage is identified and protected from division
- The agreement defines what counts as marital property accumulated during the marriage and how it gets split
- Spousal support terms — including amount, duration, and triggering events — are outlined in advance
- Business valuation methods are specified so ownership interests aren't subject to dispute later
- Appreciation of pre-marital assets, such as investment accounts, is addressed with clear formulas or percentages
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a prenup be thrown out in court?
Yes. A court may refuse to enforce a prenup if it was signed under duress, if one party failed to disclose assets, or if the terms are so one-sided they qualify as unconscionable. Proper legal representation for both sides significantly reduces this risk.
Do prenups cover child custody or child support?
No. Courts decide child custody and child support based on the child's best interests at the time of divorce, not based on a prior agreement. Any prenup clause attempting to limit custody rights or support obligations will be struck down.

