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Getting engaged is exciting, but it also brings practical questions many couples never expected to ask each other: What happens to the business I built before we met? How do we protect our children from a prior marriage? What if, someday, things don't work out? A premarital agreement, often called a "prenup" for short, gives couples a way to answer these questions on their own terms, before emotions and legal deadlines make the conversation much harder.
At McDaniel Wolff, we regularly help individuals and families across Arkansas put clear, enforceable agreements in place so they can enter marriage with confidence rather than uncertainty. Please contact any of McDaniel Wolff's family law attorneys if we can assist you with a premarital or postnuptial agreement, or submit an inquiry online.
Arkansas premarital agreements are governed by a specific state law, the Arkansas Premarital Agreement Act, found at Ark. Code Ann. § 9-11-401 and following statutes. Under this law, a premarital agreement is a written contract between two people who are planning to marry, and it only takes legal effect once the wedding actually happens. If the marriage never occurs, the agreement never takes effect.
Arkansas law gives engaged couples wide latitude to decide what belongs in their agreement, including:
One important limit: no premarital agreement can reduce or eliminate a parent's obligation to support a child. Arkansas courts will not enforce any provision that tries to do so, no matter how the agreement is worded.
This is where many homemade or outdated agreements run into trouble. To be valid, an Arkansas premarital agreement must be in writing, signed by both parties, and properly acknowledged using one of several specific legal formalities, such as a notarized statement confirming both parties consulted their own attorneys, or signatures witnessed by two disinterested individuals.
Arkansas courts have been strict about this requirement. In one notable case, an agreement was thrown out entirely because it was never acknowledged correctly, even though the couple had lived under its terms for years. The lesson for couples is simple: a prenup drafted or executed incorrectly may be worth nothing at all when it matters most.
Beyond the paperwork, courts also look at fairness. An agreement can be challenged if a spouse signed involuntarily, or if the agreement was unconscionable at signing and that spouse did not receive a fair and reasonable picture of the other person's finances beforehand. Arkansas courts have made clear that disclosure does not need to be a perfect, itemized accounting - a reasonable approximation of net worth, backed up by real documentation, has been enough to satisfy courts in past cases.
Because a premarital agreement must be signed before the wedding, timing is one of the most important practical considerations. Arkansas courts have enforced agreements where both people had time to consider the terms and were not rushed or blindsided at the altar. Couples who wait until the week of the wedding to start the process put themselves at much greater risk of a rushed, poorly documented agreement that will not hold up later. We generally recommend starting the process several months before the wedding date.
Couples who are already married cannot enter into a premarital agreement under this law, but that does not mean the door is closed. Arkansas courts recognize postnuptial agreements, made after marriage, and analyze them under general contract principles instead. These agreements can accomplish many of the same goals, particularly around property division and inheritance rights, though the legal analysis is different and deserves its own tailored approach.
A premarital agreement is one of those documents that only truly gets tested when a relationship is under the most stress, whether that is a divorce, a death, or a major financial dispute. A generic template or an agreement copied from another state will not necessarily meet Arkansas's specific formality requirements, and a poorly disclosed or one-sided agreement can be challenged and unwound in court exactly when you were counting on it to work.
At McDaniel Wolff, PLLC, our attorneys understand both the letter of Arkansas's premarital agreement law and the practical fairness standards Arkansas courts apply when these agreements are challenged. We help clients throughout Little Rock and across Arkansas draft agreements built to last. To learn more or to schedule a consultation, please contact our office or visit our Divorce & Family Law practice area page.