Millennial generation going with prenuptial agreements before saying "I do"

Warren Armstrong Image
Wednesday, August 8, 2018
Millennial generation going with prenuptial agreements before saying "I do"
More than 50-percent of participating attorneys have seen an increase in millennial prenups.

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- Erin Lowry is excitedly sending out her wedding invitations. But, let's rewind.

Before any engagement, Erin asked her fiancé about getting a prenup.

"Marriage is about love and it's about romance. But, I would never get into another contractual obligation without protecting myself. And marriage is a contract," said Lowry.

She owns a business and her fiancé has some student debt they plan to pay off after the wedding.

Lowry says an agreement simply spells out how things work.

"The way my lawyer put it, which I really love, is that everyone has a prenup. It's the law of your state. But by actually going through the process of signing one and creating one yourself, you're taking the power back," said Lowry.

A survey of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers finds more than 50-percent of participating attorneys have seen an increase in millennial prenups.

The academy's president says millennials are different than past generations.

"They consider it more of a business deal than anything else," said Academy of Matrimony Lawyers Madeline Marzano-Lesnevich.

Legal experts say prenups used to be primarily suggested by men with a lot of assets or parents trying to protect family money.

But now, male and female millennials want to protect what they have accrued before marriage. And, while spelling out what happens if a relationship breaks down is tops, prenups cover so much more.

"They will make specific arrangements in their prenuptial agreement for how household expenses will be paid," said Marzano-Lesnevich.

Erin says at first, her fiancé thought of the agreement as a sort of "divorce contract" but he eventually came around.

Now they both see it as more as marriage insurance.

"There's not going to be any blindsiding once you're actually married, and anything that could cause a lot of tension, especially in that first year of marriage, has really already been talked through before you even say 'I Do'," said Lowry.