The cultural script around prenuptial agreements still treats them as either cynical, unromantic, or specifically for the wealthy. None of those framings hold up under examination. A prenup is a contract that defines what happens to assets, debts, and obligations if a marriage ends, and almost every couple would benefit from making those decisions while they’re calm rather than during a divorce. The stigma is a holdover from a different era of marriage and finance.
Marriage is a financial contract whether you write one or not
The default rules in every state already define how property, debt, alimony, and inheritance work in marriage and divorce. If you don’t sign a prenup, you’ve effectively accepted whatever your state legislature decided makes sense for the average couple. Those default rules vary wildly by jurisdiction and were not designed for your specific situation. A prenup doesn’t add a contract to a romantic relationship โ it replaces one set of impersonal default terms with a customized set you and your partner negotiated together. Refusing to sign one isn’t avoiding a contract; it’s accepting a generic one.
The prenup conversation is the value, not just the document
Couples who go through the prenup process report that the conversations themselves โ about debt history, financial expectations, career trade-offs, family obligations โ surface issues that otherwise wouldn’t come up until much later, often during crisis. Therapists and family lawyers frequently observe that the financial alignment work involved in negotiating a prenup is one of the most useful pre-marriage exercises a couple can do. The document is the artifact; the conversation is where the real work happens.
Asymmetries make prenups especially valuable
The cases where a prenup does the most work are increasingly common: second marriages, blended families, business owners, partners with significantly different earnings or debt loads, professionals with anticipated future income, and couples where one partner steps back from a career to raise children. In any of these situations, default state law is poorly calibrated to the actual relationship. A prenup can address spousal support during a career break, protect children from a prior marriage, define the treatment of a business interest, or specify how debt acquired before marriage stays separate. None of this is romantic, but neither is the default outcome when these issues aren’t addressed.
The “it means you don’t trust your partner” framing has it backwards
People who genuinely trust each other should be able to discuss financial scenarios openly, including the unhappy ones. The framing that prenups indicate distrust gets the logic inverted: a couple that can’t discuss what would happen in divorce probably has communication issues that are bigger than the document. Treating financial planning as a betrayal of romance is the kind of cultural inheritance that mostly serves to leave people unprepared for predictable life events.
The takeaway
Prenups aren’t cynical, unromantic, or only for the rich. They’re financial planning documents that replace impersonal default rules with customized ones. The stigma is cultural inertia, not a serious argument. For most couples, having the conversation and signing the document is one of the more responsible decisions a marriage can start with.
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