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Marietta Prenup Lawyer Explains How a Prenuptial Agreement is a Key Piece of Estate Planning, Too

Posted by Steve Worrall | Oct 17, 2013

Marietta Prenup Lawyer Explains How a Prenuptial Agreement is a Key Piece of Estate Planning, Too

If you're thinking about having a prenup drawn up before you tie the knot in Cobb County or elsewhere in metro Atlanta, you may want to find an attorney who focuses on estate planning, too. Perhaps surprisingly to some, a prenuptial agreement can be a key piece of estate planning documentation. Many couples in metro Atlanta see the importance of creating a binding prenuptial agreement in order to protect their assets and plan for their future.

Today, blended families are far from unusual.  During the newlywed planning phase, the couple needs to consider what happens to “yours, mine, and ours” in the event of divorce, as well as death.  You may each have certain items or financial support that you want designated specifically for your own biological children, and a prenup in combination with estate planning documents is used to make these wishes known.

This is also the case when older couples marry.  They may each have their own grown children and grandchildren that they wish to provide for.  Without the proper agreements, a surviving spouse will often become default heir to the other's estate, allowing the spouse to do with it whatever he or she sees fit.  It could be perfectly legal for the deceased spouse's children to inherit nothing.

Working with an Atlanta area prenup lawyer before exchanging vows can help to clarify each partner's wishes, as well as to provide legal documentation.  Simply discussing your preferences is not enough, either.  To be binding, the prenuptial agreement must be in writing, and both spouses must sign it.  In fact, it is necessary for each spouse to take the appropriate amount of time to read the entire document to ensure that he or she agrees with it and is not being pressured into signing something.

A prenup that seems grossly unfair to one spouse or the other may not hold up in court, so this step is pretty important.  Some states even require that each party is advised by his or her own prenup lawyer rather than sharing the same attorney.  If one spouse omits information or outright lies about it in the prenup, that can also render it invalid.

While creating a prenuptial agreement may not be the most romantic way to go into a marriage, it can be important from an estate planning point of view.  It allows you to plan for the future and to designate your own heirs.  Some people who skipped this step are now coming to prenup lawyers to request “post-nuptial agreements.”  These documents work quite similarly to the prenuptial agreement but are simply done after the wedding is over.  It's best not to wait, but if you have to, a metro Atlanta prenup lawyer can still get the ball rolling for you.

If you're ready to get started with this process, we invite you to call our office at 770.425.6060 and ask to schedule a free Georgia Family Treasures Planning Session ( a $750 value).

About the Author

Steve Worrall

As a sandwich generation kid himself (caring for both children and aging parents), Marietta Georgia Estate Planning Elder Law & Probate Attorney Steve (Stephen M.) Worrall KNOWS the struggles you are facing as you raise children, balance the demands of your job, and take care of your aging parent...

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