Will My Prenup Hold Up in Court?
Answer 7 questions. We'll show you the specific enforceability risks under your state's law — citing the statute or case that applies. Free, anonymous, no signup.
This is general information, not legal advice. If the quiz flags risks, talk to a family law attorney licensed in your state.
Step 1 of 8
First — which state's law applies to your prenup?
If you signed in one state and live in another, pick the state where you currently live (most courts apply local law in a divorce).
What this quiz checks
The quiz walks through the seven factors courts most often use to set prenups aside:
- Time between final draft and signing (the "rush" problem — California's 7-day rule is the strictest)
- Independent counsel for each spouse
- Adequacy of financial disclosure
- Complexity of assets — and whether they were drafted by someone qualified
- Cross-state moves after signing (choice-of-law clauses don't always save you)
- Pressure or duress in the signing process
- Provisions courts refuse to enforce at all (custody, support, illegal terms)
Each flag in your results cites the statute or case that makes it a risk in your state. We don't recommend specific lawyers, but if any flag rises to "high" or "critical," our directory can connect you to a family law attorney in your state.