Prenuptial and Postnuptial Agreements in Georgia: What They Cover and How to Get One
Planning a marriage involves far more than choosing a venue and sending invitations. For many couples, it also means having an honest conversation about money, property, and financial expectations. A prenuptial or postnuptial agreement is not a signal that a marriage is doomed before it starts. It is a legal contract that gives both spouses a clear, mutually agreed-upon framework for handling finances, protecting assets, and resolving disputes without leaving everything to a judge's discretion. At J. Lee & Associates Law Group, our bilingual family law attorneys help clients throughout Norcross, Gwinnett County, and metro Atlanta draft and review marital agreements that are fair, thorough, and enforceable under Georgia law.
Prenuptial vs. Postnuptial Agreements: Key Differences
Both types of agreements accomplish the same fundamental goal: defining the financial rights and obligations of each spouse. The distinction lies entirely in timing.
Prenuptial Agreements
A prenuptial agreement, sometimes called an antenuptial agreement, is signed before the marriage ceremony takes place. It can address how property will be classified, how debts will be allocated, and what happens to each spouse's finances if the marriage ends through divorce or death. Georgia does not have a standalone premarital agreement statute comparable to the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act, which many other states have adopted. Instead, Georgia courts analyze prenuptial agreements as contracts under general contract law principles, applying the enforceability framework established in Scherer v. Scherer, 249 Ga. 635, 292 S.E.2d 662 (1982). The written requirement for prenuptial agreements derives from Georgia's application of the Statute of Frauds and settled contract principles codified under O.C.G.A. § 13-5-30, which requires certain agreements to be in writing to be enforceable.
Postnuptial Agreements
A postnuptial agreement serves the same purpose but is executed after the wedding. Georgia courts recognize postnuptial agreements, though they apply heightened scrutiny to them because spouses already owe each other fiduciary duties by the time the agreement is signed. Courts look carefully for signs of coercion or undue influence. Common reasons couples pursue postnuptial agreements include a significant change in financial circumstances, the launch of a new business, receipt of a large inheritance, or simply a desire for greater financial clarity after a period of conflict within the marriage.
What a Georgia Marital Agreement Can Cover
Georgia law gives couples substantial flexibility in structuring prenuptial and postnuptial agreements. The following categories represent the most common and legally significant provisions attorneys include in these documents.
Property Classification and Division
Defining which assets remain separate and which become marital property is often the central purpose of a prenuptial agreement. Georgia is an equitable distribution state, meaning a court divides marital property fairly at divorce but not necessarily in equal shares. Under O.C.G.A. § 19-3-9, property owned by a spouse before the marriage is recognized as that spouse's separate estate. A well-drafted prenuptial agreement reinforces and expands on this statutory protection by specifying exactly which premarital and post-marital assets fall outside the marital estate, eliminating ambiguity that could otherwise fuel costly litigation.
Spousal Support and Alimony
Georgia's alimony statute, O.C.G.A. § 19-6-1, gives courts broad discretion to award spousal support based on factors such as the length of the marriage, each party's earning capacity, the standard of living established during the marriage, and contributions made by each spouse. A prenuptial or postnuptial agreement can set the terms of alimony in advance, including the amount, duration, and triggering conditions, or waive it entirely. Locking in those terms by agreement eliminates uncertainty and gives both parties a predictable outcome rather than an open-ended judicial determination.
Business Interests and Professional Practices
Business owners face particular exposure without a marital agreement. A company founded before or during the marriage may be subject to equitable distribution at divorce, requiring a formal business valuation and potentially forcing a buyout that disrupts operations. A prenuptial agreement can designate a business or professional practice as separate property, protecting the owner's interest while still providing fair compensation provisions for the other spouse if warranted.
Debt Allocation
A prenuptial agreement can specify that each spouse remains solely responsible for debts incurred before the marriage, such as student loans, credit card balances, or business liabilities. This protection is especially important when one partner carries substantial premarital debt that could otherwise expose the other spouse to collection efforts or credit damage.
Inheritance Rights and Estate Coordination
Couples with children from prior relationships frequently use prenuptial agreements to ensure that designated assets pass directly to those children rather than becoming subject to a surviving spouse's claims. Without such an agreement, a surviving spouse may assert rights to year's support under O.C.G.A. § 53-3-1, or claim an elective share that conflicts with the deceased spouse's estate plan. A prenuptial agreement can waive or modify these rights, working in tandem with a will and other estate planning documents to accomplish the couple's objectives across all instruments.
Financial Management During the Marriage
Some agreements also address how the couple will handle finances during the marriage itself, including how living expenses will be shared, how bank accounts will be structured, and how real property will be titled. These provisions are not legally required, but they reduce friction and create shared expectations from the start of the marriage.
What Cannot Be Included in a Marital Agreement
Georgia courts will refuse to enforce certain types of provisions even when both parties signed the agreement without objection. Understanding these limits is as important as knowing what the agreement can accomplish.
Child Custody and Visitation
Custody and visitation arrangements cannot be predetermined in a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement. Under O.C.G.A. § 19-9-3, custody decisions are made at the time of the dispute based on the best interests of the child as those interests exist at that moment. A court is not bound by parenting arrangements the parties agreed to years before a divorce, regardless of how specific the contract language may be.
Child Support
Child support belongs to the child and cannot be waived or limited by private contract between the parents. Georgia calculates child support using the income shares model under O.C.G.A. § 19-6-15, based on both parents' current income and the child's actual needs at the time support is established or modified.
Unconscionable or Illegal Provisions
Any provision that violates Georgia public policy, encourages divorce by creating a direct financial incentive to end the marriage, or is so one-sided that it shocks the conscience of the court will not be enforced. Courts also retain equitable discretion to decline enforcement of provisions that have become grossly unfair due to dramatically changed circumstances, even when the original agreement was valid at the time of signing.
Enforceability Requirements Under Georgia Law
Georgia courts apply the two-part framework from Scherer v. Scherer, 249 Ga. 635, 292 S.E.2d 662 (1982), to determine whether a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement should be honored.
Voluntary Execution with Full Financial Disclosure
Both parties must enter the agreement freely, with full and accurate knowledge of the other's financial situation. Disclosure is not optional. If one spouse concealed assets, understated income, or misrepresented outstanding debts before the agreement was signed, the other party has strong grounds to void the entire contract. Agreements presented days before the wedding ceremony are also vulnerable to challenge on duress grounds. Courts view compressed timelines skeptically because they suggest one party had little real opportunity to review terms, seek independent advice, or negotiate changes.
Terms That Are Not Unconscionable at Signing
The agreement's terms must have been reasonable at the time both parties executed the document. A contract that leaves one spouse with virtually nothing while the other retains extensive wealth is unlikely to survive judicial scrutiny. Courts assess fairness as it existed at the moment of execution, not solely based on how the agreement plays out after years of changed circumstances.
Written Form and Execution Formalities
Georgia does not recognize oral prenuptial agreements. The written requirement is grounded in O.C.G.A. § 13-5-30 and longstanding contract principles applicable to marital agreements. While Georgia law does not require notarization as a formal validity condition, having both parties sign before a notary and witnesses is strongly recommended. That documentation reduces the risk of a later claim that a signature was forged, obtained under pressure, or executed without the party's full understanding of the document.
Practical Steps for a Durable Agreement
Begin the Process Early
An agreement handed to a prospective spouse one week before the ceremony is a significant red flag for any court reviewing its validity later. Both parties should have adequate time, ideally several weeks, to read the document carefully, consult with independent counsel, and negotiate terms without the emotional pressure of an imminent wedding date affecting their judgment.
Exchange Complete Financial Disclosures
Each spouse should prepare a written financial disclosure listing all assets, liabilities, income sources, and outstanding obligations. This documentation becomes part of the evidentiary record and is often the first thing a court examines when an agreement is challenged.
Retain Separate Legal Counsel
An agreement negotiated with only one attorney representing both parties, or with one party having no attorney at all, is far easier to invalidate on overreaching grounds. Independent representation protects both spouses and materially strengthens enforceability. The bilingual family law team at J. Lee & Associates Law Group can represent one party through the negotiation and drafting process while the other retains separate independent counsel, ensuring both spouses are fully advised before anyone signs.
When a Marital Agreement Makes the Most Sense
Any couple can benefit from the clarity and protection a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement provides. The conversation is especially worthwhile when one or both spouses own a business or professional practice; when there is a meaningful difference in assets, income, or existing debt between the parties; when either spouse has children from a prior relationship who need to be protected as beneficiaries; when one spouse is assuming responsibility for the other's premarital liabilities; when either party anticipates a significant inheritance; when one spouse plans to leave employment to support the household; or when either party has been through a prior divorce and wants to protect assets accumulated since that time.
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A carefully drafted prenuptial or postnuptial agreement reduces conflict, promotes financial transparency, and gives both spouses a clear understanding of their rights and responsibilities. Our team at J. Lee & Associates Law Group brings bilingual capability and dedicated family law experience to every agreement we handle. We serve clients throughout Norcross, Gwinnett County, and the greater Atlanta metro area. Contact J. Lee & Associates Law Group today at (770) 609-9396 to schedule your free consultation and start building a solid foundation for your future together.
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Have questions about a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement in Georgia? Call (770) 609-9396 or visit jlalawgroup.com to schedule your free and confidential consultation. Se habla español.

Jerome D. Lee es el abogado fundador de J. Lee & Associates Law Group, representando clientes en lesiones personales, inmigración, defensa criminal y derecho familiar en todo Metro Atlanta.
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