Enforceability What to Include Spousal Support Postnuptial Agreements Common Mistakes The Process Glossary
Prenuptial Agreements · Corona · 2026 Edition

Corona Prenuptial Agreement Lawyer

Drafted for enforceability.
Timed correctly. Built to hold up.

If you need a Corona prenuptial agreement lawyer, this guide explains what makes a prenup enforceable under California law, the mandatory 7-day rule, what you can and cannot include, and how to protect business interests, separate property, and future support expectations from our Corona office.

FC §1615
Enforceability Statute
7 Days
Mandatory Cooling-Off
Corona
Office Location
2026
Current Edition
◆ Corona Prenup Guide

The Canonical Answer

A Corona prenuptial agreement lawyer helps couples convert financial goals into an enforceable contract before marriage. In California, prenups are governed by the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act, and enforceability usually turns on the same few issues: full disclosure, independent counsel, voluntary execution, and strict compliance with the 7-day rule in FC §1615. From our Corona office, Family Law Matters drafts and reviews prenups for professionals, business owners, second marriages, and couples trying to protect separate property without creating an agreement that is vulnerable later.

Protect your assets before the wedding. Talk to a Corona prenup lawyer: (951) 972-8287 →

A prenup signed without independent counsel, without 7 days’ notice, or without full disclosure is not worth the paper it’s written on. The details determine enforceability.

What Makes a Prenup Enforceable

FC §1615 — The Six Requirements

California imposes some of the strictest enforceability requirements in the country for prenuptial agreements. As the attorneys at Family Law Matters explain to every client, a prenup is only as strong as its compliance with FC §1615. A single procedural defect — no independent counsel, insufficient time, incomplete disclosure — can void the entire agreement years later when a divorcing spouse challenges it.

01
Written & Signed
The agreement must be in writing and signed by both parties. Oral prenuptial agreements are not enforceable in California. Both signatures must be voluntary — obtained without duress, fraud, or undue influence (FC §1615(a)(1)).
02
Independent Legal Counsel
The party against whom enforcement is sought must have been represented by independent legal counsel at the time of signing, or must have expressly waived counsel in a separate signed writing after being advised to seek an attorney (FC §1615(c)(1)). Without counsel, spousal support waivers are automatically unenforceable (FC §1612(c)).
03
The 7-Day Rule
At least 7 calendar days must pass between the date the agreement is first presented to the party (and they are advised to seek counsel) and the date they sign (FC §1615(c)(2)). This is a hard rule — it cannot be waived. Presenting a prenup 6 days before the wedding is too late.
04
Full Financial Disclosure
Both parties must make a full, fair, and reasonable disclosure of all property, financial obligations, and income — or the right to disclosure must be expressly waived in writing (FC §1615(a)(2)). Hidden assets, undisclosed debts, or misrepresented income can void the entire agreement.
05
No Unconscionability
The agreement cannot be unconscionable at the time it was signed. An unconscionable agreement is one so one-sided that no reasonable person would agree to it — for example, one party waives all property rights while the other retains everything. The party claiming unconscionability bears the burden of proof.
06
Informed Understanding
If the party did not have independent counsel, they must have been “fully informed of the terms and basic effect of the agreement” as well as the rights being waived (FC §1615(c)(3)). The agreement should include a plain-language summary and an acknowledgment of understanding.
Requirement
Always Required
Written, signed, voluntary, with full disclosure and at least 7 days between presentation and signing. These are non-negotiable procedural requirements. Failure on any one voids the agreement.
MANDATORY · FC §1615
Counsel
Independent Counsel or Written Waiver
Each party should have their own attorney. If one party declines counsel, they must sign a separate written waiver acknowledging the advice to seek representation. But note: without counsel, spousal support provisions are automatically unenforceable.
COUNSEL CRITICAL · FC §1612(c)
Exception
Child Support Cannot Be Waived
No prenuptial agreement can limit or waive child support (FC §1612(b)). Child support is the right of the child, not the parent. Any provision attempting to restrict child support is void and unenforceable.
VOID · FC §1612(b)
“A premarital agreement is not enforceable if the party against whom enforcement is sought proves … that party did not have independent legal counsel … and was not provided at least seven calendar days …”
California Family Code §1615(c)
Both parties need independent counsel. Schedule your prenup consultation: (951) 972-8287 →

What a Prenup Can & Cannot Include

FC §1612 — Permitted Provisions

California law broadly allows prenuptial agreements to address property rights, debts, spousal support, and other financial matters. As the attorneys at Family Law Matters emphasize, a well-drafted prenup is not about “winning” the divorce before it happens — it is about establishing clear, agreed-upon rules that eliminate ambiguity, reduce conflict, and protect both parties.

Property Characterization
Define what is separate property and what becomes community property. Override California’s default community property rules. Protect pre-marital assets, family inheritances, and gifts from being divided as community property in a divorce. Specify how property acquired during the marriage will be classified.
Business Protection
Shield a pre-existing business from community property claims. Specify that the business and its appreciation remain the owner’s separate property. Address the community’s potential reimbursement claim for the non-owning spouse’s labor contributions (the Pereira/Van Camp analysis). Establish valuation methodology in advance.
Spousal Support Terms
Waive, limit, or define spousal support (alimony) in advance. Set caps, duration limits, or step-down schedules. Requires independent counsel for both parties (FC §1612(c)). Subject to unconscionability review at enforcement — a waiver that leaves one spouse destitute may be overridden by the court.
Debt Allocation
Protect yourself from a spouse’s pre-marital debts (student loans, credit cards, business liabilities). Specify that each party remains responsible for their pre-existing obligations. Define how debts incurred during the marriage will be allocated in a divorce.
Inheritance & Estate Rights
Modify or waive rights to inherit from each other’s estates. Protect family wealth, trusts, and generational assets. Coordinate the prenup with estate planning documents (wills, trusts, beneficiary designations) to ensure a unified strategy.
Real Estate & Retirement
Clarify ownership of the family home, investment properties, and real estate purchased before or during the marriage. Address how retirement accounts (401(k), IRA, pension) will be treated — which portion is separate property and what growth during the marriage is community.

What a Prenup Cannot Do

Prohibited
Waive or Limit Child Support
Child support is the right of the child, not the parent. No prenuptial agreement can waive, limit, cap, or modify child support obligations (FC §1612(b)). Any provision that attempts to do so is void and unenforceable. The court will calculate child support under the guideline formula (FC §4055) regardless of what the prenup says.
Prohibited
Determine Child Custody
Custody is determined at the time of separation based on the child’s best interests (FC §3011). A prenup cannot pre-determine who gets custody, set a visitation schedule, or restrict either parent’s custody rights. The court has exclusive jurisdiction over custody and will not defer to a prenuptial agreement.
Prohibited
Include Non-Financial “Lifestyle” Clauses
Clauses penalizing weight gain, mandating household chores, requiring a certain frequency of intimacy, or imposing lifestyle restrictions are not enforceable in California. Prenups are financial contracts — they govern property, debts, and support. “Infidelity clauses” are also generally unenforceable because California is a no-fault divorce state.
Prohibited
Violate Public Policy
Any provision that violates California public policy is void. This includes provisions that encourage divorce, penalize a party for seeking divorce, attempt to limit the court’s jurisdiction, or create incentives for one party to behave in a way that is detrimental to the marriage or the children.
Category Permitted? Notes
Property characterization Yes FC §1612(a)(1) — separate vs. community
Debt allocation Yes FC §1612(a)(1) — pre-marital and during marriage
Spousal support waiver Yes (with restrictions) FC §1612(c) — requires counsel, unconscionability review
Business protection Yes Classify business as separate, address appreciation
Inheritance / estate rights Yes FC §1612(a)(1) — waive or modify
Life insurance requirements Yes Require policies as security for support obligations
Child support No FC §1612(b) — void and unenforceable
Child custody No Court has exclusive jurisdiction (FC §3011)
Lifestyle clauses No Not enforceable in California

Spousal Support Provisions

The Most Litigated Provision in a Prenup

Spousal support waivers are the single most challenged provision in California prenuptial agreements. As the attorneys at Family Law Matters advise, a spousal support waiver that is technically valid when signed can still be overridden by the court if it would be unconscionable at the time of enforcement. This makes drafting spousal support provisions both the most valuable and the most delicate part of a prenup.

Requirement
Independent Counsel Mandatory
Under FC §1612(c), any provision waiving or limiting spousal support is automatically unenforceable if the party against whom it is enforced did not have independent legal counsel at the time of signing. This is a bright-line rule — no exception, no waiver.
NO COUNSEL = UNENFORCEABLE
Review
Unconscionability at Enforcement
Even with counsel, the court reviews the spousal support provision at the time of divorce. If enforcing it would be unconscionable given the circumstances at divorce — not at signing — the court can modify or override it. Circumstances that changed dramatically (career sacrificed, serious illness, disability) matter.
CASE-BY-CASE · FC §1612(c)
Strategy
Alternatives to Full Waiver
Rather than a complete waiver (which invites challenge), consider a cap on support amount, a declining schedule tied to marriage duration, or a formula-based approach. Agreements that are fair but limited are far more likely to survive unconscionability review than total waivers.
STRUCTURED LIMITS · BEST PRACTICE
Approach A
Complete Waiver
Both parties waive all spousal support. Simple and clear, but the most vulnerable to challenge at enforcement. Works best for short marriages where both parties have comparable earning capacity and no children.
Risk: High if circumstances change dramatically. Requires independent counsel for both parties.
Approach B
Cap & Duration Limit
Support is capped at a specific amount (e.g., $3,000/month) and limited in duration (e.g., one year of support for every two years of marriage). Provides a reasonable safety net while limiting exposure for the higher-earning spouse.
Risk: Moderate. Much more likely to survive unconscionability review. Recommended for most cases.
Approach C
Declining Schedule
Support decreases over time — for example, $5,000/month for the first year, $3,000 for years 2–3, then terminates. Incentivizes self-sufficiency while providing transition support. Tied to a percentage of income at the time of separation.
Risk: Lower. Courts view declining schedules favorably. Best combined with a career-sacrifice escalator.

The strongest spousal support provisions are those that are fair to both parties at the time of signing and include built-in adjustments for changes in circumstances. A provision that leaves one spouse unable to meet basic needs after a 20-year marriage where they raised children full-time will not survive judicial review — regardless of what was agreed.

Will your prenup hold up in court? Get it reviewed by an expert: (951) 972-8287 →

Getting Married? Protect What You’ve Built.

A prenup drafted by an experienced Temecula attorney protects both parties, eliminates ambiguity, and survives judicial challenge.

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Postnuptial Agreements

After the Wedding — Different Rules Apply

A postnuptial agreement is signed after the marriage has already taken place. While it addresses many of the same issues as a prenup, it is governed by different legal rules — most significantly the transmutation statute (FC §852) and the fiduciary duties that exist between spouses (FC §721). As the attorneys at Family Law Matters explain, postnuptial agreements receive greater judicial scrutiny than prenups because of the inherent trust relationship between married spouses.

Factor Prenuptial Agreement Postnuptial Agreement
When Signed Before marriage During marriage
Governing Law UPAA (FC §1600–1617) General contract law + FC §850–853
7-Day Rule Yes — mandatory No statutory requirement (but advisable)
Transmutation Rules Not applicable FC §852 requires express written declaration
Fiduciary Duties Arm’s-length transaction Highest good faith required (FC §721)
Judicial Scrutiny Standard Heightened — presumption of undue influence
Burden of Proof Challenger must prove invalidity Advantaged spouse may need to prove fairness
FC §852 — Transmutation
When a postnuptial agreement changes property from community to separate (or vice versa), it must comply with the transmutation statute: the change must be made by an express declaration in writing that is accepted by the spouse whose interest is adversely affected. A general statement is insufficient — the writing must specifically identify the property being transmuted.
FC §721 — Fiduciary Duty
Spouses owe each other the highest duty of good faith and fair dealing (FC §721). In a postnuptial agreement, the spouse who benefits from the agreement may bear the burden of proving that it was entered into freely and with full understanding. This is the opposite of the prenup context, where the challenger bears the burden.
When to Use a Postnup
Common triggers: one spouse starts a business during the marriage, a significant inheritance is received, the marriage is in trouble and the parties want to define terms before deciding on divorce, or the parties simply did not execute a prenup before the wedding and now want the same protections.
Own a business or real estate? Protect separate property now: (951) 972-8287 →

Common Mistakes That Void Prenups

Every Mistake Is a Future Argument for Invalidation

A prenup is only challenged when a marriage ends — often years or decades after signing. As the attorneys at Family Law Matters warn, the spouse who wants out of the prenup will scrutinize every procedural detail. A single defect that seemed minor at signing can void the entire agreement at the worst possible moment.

Fatal
Last-Minute Presentation
Presenting the prenup days before the wedding — or worse, the night before — violates the 7-day rule and creates a strong argument for duress. The implicit message is “sign or the wedding is off,” which courts treat as coercion. Start the process at least 2–3 months before the wedding.
Fatal
No Independent Counsel
Using one attorney for both parties is a critical error. The attorney cannot represent both sides — it is an inherent conflict of interest. Each party must have their own attorney, or the non-represented party must sign an express written waiver. Without counsel, spousal support waivers are automatically void.
Fatal
Incomplete Financial Disclosure
Hiding assets, undervaluing businesses, or omitting debts gives the other party a powerful argument to void the entire agreement. Disclosure must be comprehensive — bank accounts, investments, real estate, business interests, retirement accounts, debts, and income. Attach financial statements as exhibits.
Risky
Extreme One-Sidedness
An agreement where one party waives everything and the other retains everything is vulnerable to an unconscionability challenge. Courts look at the overall fairness of the agreement — if it shocks the conscience, it may be voided even if all procedural requirements were met.
Risky
Boilerplate / Template Agreements
Online templates and generic forms do not account for California’s specific requirements (7-day rule, independent counsel, FC §1612/1615). They frequently include unenforceable provisions (child custody, lifestyle clauses) and omit required procedural safeguards. A template prenup is a false sense of security.
Risky
Failure to Update
A prenup drafted 15 years ago may not reflect current assets, children born during the marriage, career changes, or new businesses. While the original agreement remains valid if properly executed, outdated provisions may be challenged as unconscionable at enforcement. Consider amending the prenup as circumstances change.

The Drafting Process

Start Early — At Least 3 Months Before the Wedding

A properly drafted prenup requires time — for financial disclosure, attorney review, negotiation of terms, and the mandatory 7-day period. The attorneys at Family Law Matters recommend initiating the process at least 3 months before the wedding to avoid any appearance of pressure or duress. Rushing a prenup is the number-one cause of future enforceability challenges.

01
Initial Consultation
Meet with your attorney to discuss your goals, assets, debts, business interests, and concerns. The attorney explains California’s community property system, what a prenup can and cannot do, and develops a strategy tailored to your situation.
02
Full Financial Disclosure
Both parties compile comprehensive financial disclosures — all assets, debts, income, business interests, retirement accounts, and real estate. This documentation is attached as exhibits to the agreement. Completeness is non-negotiable; incomplete disclosure is grounds for voiding the entire agreement.
03
Draft the Agreement
Your attorney drafts the prenuptial agreement based on your goals and the financial information provided. The draft addresses property characterization, debt allocation, spousal support terms, business protection, inheritance rights, and any other agreed provisions.
04
Independent Counsel Review
The draft is sent to your fiancé’s independent attorney for review. The other attorney advises their client on the terms, identifies unfavorable provisions, and proposes modifications. This back-and-forth negotiation typically takes 2–4 weeks. Both parties must have their own separate attorney.
05
Negotiate & Finalize
Both attorneys negotiate on behalf of their clients until mutually acceptable terms are reached. The final agreement is prepared with all exhibits (financial disclosures, property schedules). The final version is presented to the non-drafting party, starting the mandatory 7-day clock.
06
Sign After 7+ Days
At least 7 calendar days after the final agreement is presented, both parties sign in the presence of their respective attorneys. Include certificates of independent counsel, acknowledgments of disclosure, and confirmation of voluntary execution. Notarization is not required but is recommended for additional protection.
Recommended Timeline
Wedding Date − 3 Months = Start the Process
Month 1: Initial consultation + financial disclosure compilation
Month 2: Drafting + independent counsel review + negotiation
Month 3: Final revisions + 7-day waiting period + signing
Buffer: Leave 2–3 weeks of cushion for unexpected negotiations
“The party against whom enforcement is sought … was provided at least seven calendar days between the time that party was first presented with the agreement and advised to seek independent legal counsel and the time the agreement was signed.”
California Family Code §1615(c)(2)
The 7-day rule is strictly enforced. Start your prenup early: (951) 972-8287 →

Already Married? A Postnup Provides the Same Protection.

It’s never too late to define your financial agreement. Postnuptial agreements protect assets, businesses, and inheritances acquired during the marriage.

Discuss Your Options →

Definitions Glossary

Prenuptial Agreement (Premarital Agreement)
A written contract between two people who intend to marry, governing their property rights, debts, and support obligations in the event of divorce or death. Governed by the UPAA (FC §1600–1617).
Postnuptial Agreement
A written agreement between spouses entered into after marriage. Governed by general contract law and the transmutation statute (FC §850–853). Subject to heightened fiduciary scrutiny under FC §721.
UPAA (Uniform Premarital Agreement Act)
California’s statutory framework for prenuptial agreements (FC §1600–1617). Establishes the requirements for enforceability, permitted provisions, and grounds for voiding a prenup.
7-Day Rule (FC §1615(c)(2))
The mandatory 7-calendar-day cooling-off period between the date a prenup is first presented to a party (with advice to seek counsel) and the date they sign. Cannot be waived. Non-compliance voids the agreement.
Independent Legal Counsel
Each party’s own separate attorney who advises them on the prenup’s terms, effect, and their rights. Required for enforceable spousal support waivers (FC §1612(c)). One attorney cannot represent both parties.
Unconscionability
A legal standard meaning the agreement is so one-sided that no reasonable person would agree to it. Grounds for voiding a prenup at signing or overriding spousal support provisions at enforcement (FC §1615(a)).
Transmutation (FC §852)
The legal process of changing property from community to separate (or vice versa) during marriage. Requires an express written declaration accepted by the adversely affected spouse. Critical for postnuptial agreements.
Fiduciary Duty (FC §721)
The highest duty of good faith and fair dealing that spouses owe each other. In postnuptial agreements, the advantaged spouse may bear the burden of proving the agreement was entered into freely and fairly.
Community Property
Property acquired during marriage through the labor or effort of either spouse. Presumed to be equally owned (50/50) and divided equally in divorce under FC §2550. A prenup can override this default rule.
Separate Property
Property owned before marriage, acquired by gift or inheritance during marriage, or earned after the date of separation. Confirmed to the owning spouse in divorce (FC §770). A prenup can expand or restrict this classification.
Pereira / Van Camp Analysis
Two competing formulas used to determine the community’s interest in a separate property business that appreciated during the marriage. Pereira allocates a fair return on investment as separate and the rest as community. Van Camp allocates reasonable compensation for labor as community and the rest as separate. A prenup can specify which method applies.
Duress
Coercion that overcomes the free will of a party. A prenup signed under duress is void. Classic example: presenting the prenup hours before the wedding with the implicit threat that the wedding will not proceed unless the other party signs.
Full Financial Disclosure
A complete and honest accounting of all assets, debts, income, and financial obligations provided by both parties before signing. Incomplete disclosure is grounds for voiding the entire prenup (FC §1615(a)(2)).
Sunset Clause
A provision that causes the prenup (or specific provisions) to expire after a certain number of years of marriage. For example, a sunset clause might void the entire prenup after 15 years, converting the marriage to standard community property rules.
Need a prenup or postnup drafted? Discuss your agreement: (951) 972-8287 →

Legal Framework

FC §1600
FC §1610
FC §1611
FC §1612
FC §1615
FC §721
FC §770
FC §850
FC §852
FC §2550
FC §3011
FC §4055
FC §4320
FC §4336

Your Future. Your Terms.

Whether you need a prenup before the wedding, a postnup to protect a new business or inheritance, or an attorney to review an agreement your fiancé has presented — get a clear, strategic assessment from a Temecula prenuptial agreement specialist.

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Family Law Matters — Temecula, California

An enforceable prenup starts with the right lawyer. Free Temecula prenup consultation: (951) 972-8287 →
Legal Disclaimer: This guide is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this content does not establish an attorney-client relationship. Prenuptial and postnuptial agreement outcomes depend on individualized facts, and enforceability varies by circumstance, drafting quality, and judicial interpretation. For advice specific to your situation, consult a licensed California family law attorney. Information is current as of March 2026 and may not reflect subsequent legislative changes.

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