FL · Equitable distribution

Florida Prenuptial Agreements

A Florida prenuptial agreement is governed by the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act (Fla. Stat. §61.079). Florida puts heavy weight on fair financial disclosure — without it (or a valid written waiver), the agreement can be set aside.

Flat fee from $1,500 · a fraction of a $15,000–$100,000+ divorce

Equitable distribution

How Florida divides property.

Florida divides marital property by equitable distribution — fairly, but not necessarily equally. A prenuptial agreement lets you opt out of that default and define your own terms.

WealthGuard builds your agreement around these rules — so it’s tailored to Florida, not a generic national template.

What Florida requires

Fair and reasonable disclosure (or written waiver)

Under Fla. Stat. §61.079, the agreement must be signed voluntarily with fair and reasonable disclosure of each party’s finances, unless that right is expressly waived in writing.

In writing and signed

The agreement must be a written contract signed by both parties before the marriage.

Full and fair financial disclosure

Each party should fully disclose assets, debts, and income. Inadequate disclosure is a leading reason agreements are later thrown out.

Voluntary, without duress

Both parties must sign freely — not under pressure, and with enough time to review. Last-minute, eve-of-wedding signings invite challenges.

How WealthGuard handles Florida

Your state’s rules, applied automatically.

State-aware interview

The guided interview captures the facts Florida cares about — including disclosure and execution requirements.

Enforceability review

A 15-point review checks the agreement against the factors that get prenups thrown out before anything is generated.

Attorney-ready package

You receive the agreement, schedules, disclosures, and a memo — ready for a licensed Florida attorney to review and finalize.

Florida legal sources

This page is general information, not legal advice, and law changes over time. WealthGuard is not a law firm; your agreement is reviewed by an independent licensed attorney before you sign.