What an Illinois prenuptial agreement actually does
A prenuptial agreement is a contract between two people who are planning to marry. It sets the rules for how property, debt, and certain financial obligations will be handled during the marriage and, if the marriage ends, how those same items will be divided. In Illinois, these agreements are formally called premarital agreements and are governed by the Illinois Uniform Premarital Agreement Act at 750 ILCS 10/1 et seq. You will also hear them called prenups, antenuptial agreements, or marital agreements. All four terms refer to the same instrument.
A prenup is a contract, and contracts only work if they are drafted to hold up. A written agreement sitting in a drawer will not protect you unless it meets Illinois’s specific requirements for enforceability. That is the part most couples get wrong when they try to draft one themselves or download a template.
Two things worth knowing up front. First, a prenup does not take effect the day it is signed. Under 750 ILCS 10/5, the agreement becomes effective only when you actually marry. If the wedding does not happen, the agreement is a dead letter. Second, Illinois is one of the few areas of contract law that does not require separate consideration for a prenup. The marriage itself is the consideration. You do not need to exchange money or anything else of value to make the agreement binding.
For couples considering how the alternative to a prenup looks, the default rules in Illinois divorce law divide marital property equitably rather than equally, and a judge makes the call on maintenance. If you want a say in how those decisions play out, the prenup is the place to have it. For broader context on that process, our DuPage County divorce attorney page walks through how Illinois divorce works without a prenup in place.
Not just for the wealthy
The idea that prenups are only for high-net-worth couples is the most persistent myth we correct. Illinois couples across every income bracket use prenuptial agreements, particularly those with children from a prior relationship, a business interest or professional practice, student loan or credit card debt, an expected inheritance, or a home owned before the marriage. If there is something you want to keep separate or a financial exposure you want to limit, a prenup is the right tool regardless of the dollar figures involved.
What a prenuptial agreement can (and cannot) include
Illinois law gives couples broad latitude to decide what goes into a prenup. Under 750 ILCS 10/4, a premarital agreement can address almost any financial or property matter the two of you want to clarify. There are, however, a handful of subjects Illinois courts will not let you decide in advance, and those limits matter.
What a prenup can cover
Marital and non-marital property classification, division of assets and debt on divorce, maintenance (alimony) including waiver, disposition of property on death, business interests, retirement accounts, inheritances, and choice-of-law provisions.
What a prenup cannot cover
Child custody (parental responsibilities), parenting time, child support, and any provision that violates Illinois public policy or imposes a criminal penalty. These matters stay with the court.
What you can address in an Illinois prenup
The practical list is broader than most people expect. Illinois couples use prenuptial agreements to:
- Classify specific assets as marital or non-marital property, so there is no dispute later over what belonged to whom
- Decide how property and debt acquired during the marriage will be divided if the marriage ends
- Set the amount and duration of spousal maintenance, or waive it entirely in writing
- Protect a business or professional practice from being valued, divided, or losing goodwill in a divorce
- Protect inheritances, family trusts, and expected gifts from being treated as marital property
- Coordinate with wills, trusts, and estate plans so a spouse’s death does not override the couple’s intentions for their children
- Require mediation or arbitration rather than litigation if the marriage ends
- Specify which state’s law governs interpretation of the agreement
A well-drafted Illinois prenup reads less like a divorce document and more like a financial plan the two of you built together.
What you cannot put in an Illinois prenup
This is where most do-it-yourself prenups go wrong.
Child issues stay with the court
Illinois law does not allow prenuptial agreements to predetermine child custody, parenting time, or child support. Any clause attempting to do so will be struck down, because the court must decide these issues based on the best interests of the child at the time of the divorce, not based on a document the parents signed years earlier. This is the single most common misconception we correct.
The reasoning is straightforward. A couple signing a prenup before they have children cannot know what those children will need, what each parent’s role will become, or what circumstances will look like ten years later. Illinois courts reserve the right to make those decisions when the facts are actually in front of them. For a deeper walkthrough of how Illinois handles child custody and child support, see our dedicated practice pages.
A few other limits apply. A prenup cannot include terms that violate public policy, such as a clause rewarding infidelity with financial penalties or promising specific behavior during the marriage. It cannot require anything illegal. And it cannot leave one spouse so destitute that enforcement would be unconscionable at the time of the divorce.
The good news: if a prenup contains an unenforceable child-related provision or public-policy violation, Illinois courts typically strike the offending clause and enforce the rest of the agreement, rather than throwing out the whole document. But this is exactly the kind of technical issue a family law attorney catches before you sign.
Who benefits from a prenup in DuPage County
Plenty of couples who would benefit from a prenuptial agreement talk themselves out of one because they assume it signals a lack of trust. In our experience, the opposite is closer to the truth. The financial transparency a prenup forces, the conversations about money, debt, expectations, and family obligations, is exactly the conversation most couples should have before the wedding anyway.
1
You own a business or professional practice
A prenup can specify that the business stays non-marital property, address how appreciation during the marriage is treated, and spare a divorce judge from having to value your company.
2
You have children from a prior relationship
A prenup coordinates with your estate plan to ensure assets intended for children from a prior marriage are not redirected to a surviving spouse under Illinois’s intestate rules.
3
You are bringing significant premarital assets
Real estate, retirement accounts, investment portfolios, and savings accumulated before the marriage can be classified as non-marital in a prenup, so there is no later dispute about what was yours going in.
4
One spouse has significant debt
Student loans, credit card debt, and other premarital liabilities can be walled off in the prenup, protecting the other spouse from being asked to pay down debt they did not incur.
5
You expect an inheritance
An expected inheritance or future stake in a family business can be addressed in advance, so those assets remain separate if the marriage ends.
6
You have very different income trajectories
When one spouse earns substantially more or has dramatically different career plans, a prenup can address maintenance, lifestyle expectations, and how shared expenses will be handled.
A prenup does not stop a marriage from being a partnership. It clarifies what each partner brought to the table and what the rules are if that partnership ever has to be unwound.
What makes an Illinois prenup enforceable
Most prenups that fall apart in court fall apart for predictable reasons. Illinois has a specific statutory test, and knowing that test is the difference between an agreement that protects you and a document that gives you false confidence.
The baseline formal requirements
Under 750 ILCS 10/3, an Illinois prenuptial agreement must be:
- In writing
- Signed by both parties
Illinois explicitly provides that a premarital agreement is enforceable without separate consideration. The marriage itself supplies it. There is no requirement that the parties exchange money, property, or anything else of value.
Those are the formalities. A prenup that meets them is valid on its face. Whether it holds up when challenged in a divorce is a separate question governed by a different section of the statute.
When a court will refuse to enforce a prenup
The enforcement standard in Illinois is at 750 ILCS 10/7. The party challenging the agreement has the burden of proof, and the statute lays out a narrow two-part test.
How Illinois courts evaluate a prenup challenge
When a spouse asks a court to throw out a prenup during divorce, the court applies the two-part test in 750 ILCS 10/7. The agreement stands unless the challenger proves one of the grounds below.
1
Step
Was the signing voluntary?
If the challenger proves the signing was coerced, pressured, or obtained under duress, the prenup fails here and the analysis stops.
2
Step
Was the agreement unconscionable when executed?
An unfair agreement is not automatically unconscionable. The term requires gross one-sidedness, not merely a hard bargain.
3
Step
Was there fair financial disclosure?
If the agreement was unconscionable, the court asks whether there was fair and reasonable disclosure of the other party’s property and financial obligations. Full schedules of assets, debts, and income go a long way here.
4
Step
Was disclosure waived in writing?
If fair disclosure was not provided, did the challenging party voluntarily and expressly waive disclosure in writing? A well-drafted Illinois prenup includes an explicit disclosure waiver clause for exactly this reason.
5
Step
Was there adequate knowledge anyway?
If there was no written waiver, the court asks whether the challenging party otherwise had adequate knowledge of the other party’s financial picture. A bookkeeper spouse or a long-term business partner may already know enough to satisfy this prong.
Illinois case law has narrowed prenup invalidation to these statutory grounds. In In re Marriage of Woodrum, the appellate court reaffirmed that parties can waive or modify marital rights through a valid premarital agreement, with limited grounds to find the agreement unenforceable. In In re Marriage of Hightower, the court held that prenuptial agreements regarding property disposition and maintenance are binding on the court unless found to be unconscionable.
The practical takeaway: a prenup is not invalid just because it turns out to be unfair years later. It is invalid when the process that produced it was coercive, fraudulent, or lacking the financial transparency the statute requires.
Financial disclosure is the element most prenups fail on
If there is one area where prenups get challenged and lose, it is financial disclosure. A prenup drafted without complete schedules of each party’s assets, debts, income, ownership interests, and expected inheritances is vulnerable the moment the marriage ends.
A proper disclosure schedule lists specific accounts, balances, property addresses and values, business interests, retirement accounts, loan balances, and any anticipated inheritances or gifts. It is attached as an exhibit to the agreement. Each party signs acknowledging they have received and reviewed the other’s schedule.
If a spouse chooses to waive further disclosure, the waiver has to be explicit, in writing, and signed. Illinois courts have consistently held that an agreement with a properly executed disclosure waiver clause is, as a practical matter, very difficult to overturn. Without one, the challenger gets a second bite at the apple under the statutory test.
At Dolci Weiland & Sendlak, we treat disclosure as the foundation of the agreement, not as paperwork to rush through. A prenup with thorough schedules on both sides, signed waivers where appropriate, and the time for each party to review the other’s financial picture is an agreement that holds up.
Thinking about a prenup or asked to sign one?
A 30-minute call with a DuPage County family law attorney can tell you whether the terms you are looking at will actually hold up. Free, confidential, no obligation.
Or call us directly: (630) 261-9098
How to get a prenuptial agreement in Illinois
A well-drafted Illinois prenup is not a one-meeting project. The process is collaborative, and done properly, it takes weeks rather than days. Rushing the timeline is one of the most common ways a prenup later gets challenged on voluntariness grounds.
The drafting process from start to signature
Most Illinois prenuptial agreements take four to eight weeks from initial consultation to a signed document, depending on the complexity of the assets involved and how quickly both parties exchange financial disclosures.
1
Step
Initial consultation
You meet with a family law attorney to identify what the agreement needs to accomplish: protecting a business, classifying a home, waiving maintenance, coordinating with an estate plan, or some combination.
2
Step
Full financial disclosure
Both parties prepare complete schedules of assets, debts, income, and expected inheritances. This is the foundation the agreement rests on.
3
Step
Drafting
Your attorney prepares the agreement based on the disclosure and the goals identified in the consultation.
4
Step
Independent review
Your fiancé retains their own attorney to review the draft. Illinois courts look favorably on agreements where both parties had independent counsel, and it is one of the strongest defenses against a later voluntariness challenge.
5
Step
Negotiation and revision
Terms are refined, often over several rounds, until both parties are comfortable with the final document.
6
Step
Signing and notarization
Both parties sign, ideally well before the wedding date. Notarization is not strictly required in Illinois, but it is strongly recommended for enforceability.
7
Step
Effective upon marriage
The agreement becomes legally binding the day the marriage occurs under 750 ILCS 10/5.
Timing matters. An agreement signed the night before the wedding, with the caterer in the driveway, is the textbook fact pattern for a voluntariness challenge. We recommend signing at least 30 days before the wedding, and earlier when possible. For couples with more complex assets, starting the process three to six months out gives both sides the time a court will later see as reasonable.
Cost of a prenuptial agreement in DuPage County
Prenup cost is one of the most common questions during initial consultations, and the honest answer is that it varies significantly based on what the agreement needs to do.
A straightforward agreement for a couple with modest premarital assets, no business interests, and no prior-marriage children takes substantially less attorney time than an agreement involving business ownership, multiple properties, trusts, retirement accounts from both parties, or financial obligations from a prior marriage. Negotiation time also drives cost. An agreement where both parties’ attorneys reach consensus quickly costs less than one that requires multiple rounds of back-and-forth.
At Dolci Weiland & Sendlak, we provide a clear fee estimate during the free initial consultation once we understand the scope. What we can say across the board: the one-time investment in a properly drafted prenup is almost always a small fraction of what contested property division, business valuation, or maintenance litigation would cost if the marriage later ends without one in place.
What if we are already married? Postnuptial agreements
If the wedding has come and gone and you did not sign a prenup, you are not out of options. Illinois recognizes postnuptial agreements, which cover the same general territory as prenups but are signed after the marriage has taken place.
Postnups can address most of the same issues: property classification, division of assets and debt, maintenance, business protection, and estate coordination. The enforceability standards are similar, though Illinois courts apply some additional scrutiny because the consideration of the marriage itself no longer applies. A postnup typically needs to show a present exchange of value or mutual promises to be fully enforceable.
Couples commonly turn to postnuptial agreements after a significant financial event: one spouse starts a business, receives an inheritance, takes on a large debt, or the couple reconciles after a period of separation. If you missed the prenup window, a postnuptial agreement can still accomplish most of what a prenup would have.
How we represent clients on both sides of a prenup
Most firms write for the spouse proposing the prenup. We represent both sides, and the strategy is different depending on which side of the table you are on.
For the party proposing the prenup. The job is to build an agreement that is comprehensive, specific, and enforceable. That means full financial disclosure, clean language on property classification, carefully drafted maintenance provisions, a proper disclosure waiver clause where appropriate, and coordination with any existing estate plan. It also means giving your fiancé’s attorney enough time to review and negotiate, because an agreement signed under time pressure is the one that gets challenged.
For the party asked to sign one. If your fiancé hands you a draft their attorney prepared, do not sign it without your own review. We read the draft for provisions that would not survive an Illinois enforcement challenge, terms that leave you exposed, and language that a court would later find unconscionable. We then negotiate revisions before you sign. Illinois law strongly favors both parties having independent counsel, and having your own attorney is one of the cleanest ways to protect yourself if the agreement is ever challenged later.
Managing Partner Alex Sendlak leads our family law practice and handles prenup matters personally. When you work with DWS, you are working directly with the attorney whose name is on the pleading.
Counties and communities we serve
Our office is in Oakbrook Terrace, and we represent prenuptial agreement clients across DuPage County, including Wheaton, Naperville, Oak Brook, Downers Grove, Elmhurst, Lombard, Glen Ellyn, Hinsdale, Lisle, Carol Stream, and Bloomingdale. We also handle matters throughout Cook County, Kane County, Will County, and Kendall County, covering the full Greater Chicago area.
If you are planning a marriage anywhere in the western suburbs and are considering a prenup, or if you have been asked to sign one, we are available for a consultation at a time that works for you. Our family law practice handles the full range of pre-marriage and divorce-related matters, and our alimony calculator can give you a rough sense of what Illinois maintenance would look like in your situation without a prenup in place.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. Illinois prenuptial agreements are governed by the Illinois Uniform Premarital Agreement Act (750 ILCS 10/1 et seq.) and are routinely enforced by Illinois courts. A prenup is invalid only if the challenging party proves either that the agreement was signed involuntarily or that it was unconscionable when executed and lacked fair financial disclosure without a written waiver. A properly drafted Illinois prenup with complete disclosure schedules is very difficult to overturn.
Prenups themselves are private contracts between the couple and are not filed with any public office. They become part of the public record only if one party later introduces the agreement during a divorce proceeding, at which point the agreement may be attached to court filings. Until then, the agreement stays between you, your fiancé, and your attorneys.
Yes, and this is one of the most common uses of an Illinois prenup. The agreement can specify that a home owned before the marriage remains non-marital property, address how any appreciation during the marriage is treated, and handle the situation where marital funds are used to pay down the mortgage or make improvements. Without a prenup, Illinois courts apply default rules that may reclassify part of the home as marital property.
Yes. An Illinois prenup can specify that any inheritance you receive during the marriage remains non-marital property, even if it would otherwise become commingled with marital funds. This is particularly valuable for clients who expect to inherit a family business, real estate, or significant financial assets.
Yes. Under 750 ILCS 10/4, maintenance can be addressed in a prenuptial agreement, including a full waiver. Illinois courts will enforce a maintenance waiver unless doing so would leave one spouse unable to provide for themselves, which could trigger the unconscionability standard under 750 ILCS 10/7. A well-drafted waiver that accounts for both parties’ projected circumstances almost always holds up.
Yes. Prenups can be amended or revoked after the marriage, but the amendment must be in writing and signed by both parties. In practice, couples who want to change a prenup post-marriage often execute a postnuptial agreement that either supplements or replaces the original.
We recommend signing at least 30 days before the wedding, and earlier when possible. For couples with complex assets, starting three to six months out is advisable. An agreement signed days or hours before the ceremony is the textbook fact pattern for a later voluntariness challenge, which is the fastest way to have the agreement thrown out.
A prenup cannot alter or eliminate your spouse’s child support obligation to children from a prior relationship. What a prenup can do is classify your own assets and income streams as non-marital and specify that marital funds will not be used to satisfy your spouse’s prior obligations, providing a layer of financial separation.
A well-drafted Illinois prenup includes a choice-of-law clause specifying that Illinois law governs the agreement regardless of where the couple later lives. Most states will enforce another state’s choice-of-law provision in a prenuptial agreement, though how the agreement is applied in a divorce depends on the new state’s procedural rules. If you are planning a move, we can review the agreement and, where appropriate, recommend an amendment.
Talk to a DuPage County prenuptial agreement attorney
A prenuptial agreement is a conversation before it is a contract. Whether you are protecting a business you built, an inheritance you expect, a home you already own, or simply the right to walk into your marriage with a clear financial understanding, the value of the document is in how well it is drafted.
At Dolci Weiland & Sendlak, our family law team drafts, reviews, and negotiates Illinois prenuptial agreements for clients throughout DuPage County, Cook County, Kane County, Will County, and Kendall County. Alex Sendlak leads our family law practice and handles prenup matters directly. Your first consultation is free, and our attorneys are available 24/7.
Call us at (630) 261-9098 or schedule your free consultation online. From our office at 17W662 Butterfield Rd in Oakbrook Terrace, we are a short drive from Wheaton, Naperville, Oak Brook, Lombard, Downers Grove, and the rest of the western suburbs.