PrenupByState

Prenuptial Agreement Lawyers in San Diego, CA

Last updated 5 min read

A prenuptial agreement attorney in San Diego typically charges $320–$630/hr, with total prenup costs running $3,200 – $5,300 for simple agreements and up to $10,500 – $21,000 for complex estates. San Diego is in California, where Cal. Fam. Code §§1610–1617 governs prenup enforceability. This page covers what to look for in a San Diego prenup attorney, typical rates, and how to find one. It isn't legal advice.

The San Diego prenup attorney market

San Diego rates run close to the California state average. Military-family considerations (BAH, retirement) come up frequently given the Navy/Marine presence.

Prenup cost in San Diego

Complexity San Diego cost California state avg
Simple $3,200 – $5,300 $3,000 – $5,000
Moderate $5,300 – $10,500 $5,000 – $10,000
Complex $10,500 – $21,000 $10,000 – $20,000

San Diego attorney rates run 5% above the California state average. The full California cost breakdown is on the California prenup cost guide.

What to look for in a San Diego prenup attorney

  • Bar-licensed in California. Non-negotiable. An attorney from a neighboring state cannot represent you here.
  • Family-law focus, not generalist. California prenup procedural rules (Cal. Fam. Code §§1610–1617) are unforgiving; specialists handle them daily.
  • Active in San Diego courts. Local court customs, scheduling, and judge familiarity matter when prenups get challenged.
  • Comfortable being one of two attorneys. Joint representation is one of the most common bases for invalidation later.
  • Flat-fee quote available. San Diego rates are high enough that hourly billing can balloon; ask for a flat or capped fee once they\'ve scoped your situation.

California prenup rules that apply in San Diego

  • Statute: Cal. Fam. Code §§1610–1617
  • In writing + signed: Required.
  • Notarization: Not required, but recommended.
  • Waiting period: 7 days between final draft and signing required by statute.
  • Independent counsel: Required by statute.
  • Community property state: Yes — default rule absent a prenup is equal split of marital property.

California has the strictest procedural framework in the country. The 7-day rule in Cal. Fam. Code §1615(c)(2) requires at least seven calendar days between presenting the final agreement and signing it. Either both parties have independent counsel, or the unrepresented party signs an express written waiver after being warned in writing of the terms and effect. Disclosure must be specific and complete.

Find a San Diego prenup attorney

We partner with LegalMatch to connect readers with vetted family-law attorneys in San Diego and surrounding California. Attorneys are screened for bar admission, malpractice insurance, and family-law focus.

Find a prenup attorney in San Diego

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You can also use the California State Bar lawyer-referral service.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a prenup lawyer cost in San Diego?
In San Diego, family-law attorney rates run $320–$630/hr. Total prenup fees range from $3,200 – $5,300 for a simple agreement to $10,500 – $21,000 for complex estates. San Diego rates run close to the California state average. Military-family considerations (BAH, retirement) come up frequently given the Navy/Marine presence.
How do I find a San Diego prenup attorney?
Three reliable paths: (1) a vetted matching service like LegalMatch that screens family-law attorneys by San Diego-metro practice; (2) the California state bar's lawyer-referral service at https://www.calbar.ca.gov; (3) a referral from a family-law attorney you already know. Avoid general-practice attorneys — prenups have state-specific procedural rules best handled by specialists.
Do San Diego courts apply different prenup rules than the rest of California?
No — California prenup law (Cal. Fam. Code §§1610–1617) applies uniformly across the state, including San Diego. What varies by metro: attorney rates, court backlogs, and the typical asset mix in local prenups. The substantive enforceability standard is the same statewide.
Can I sign a prenup in San Diego and move to another state later?
Yes, but choice-of-law clauses don't always survive a move. If you later divorce in another state, that state's courts decide whether to apply California law or local law. See the DeLorean v. DeLorean case for the textbook example. For couples with high relocation probability, drafting that satisfies multiple states' rules is the safer approach.