Nevada Prenuptial Agreement Analyzer

See whether a prenup is worth the cost in Nevada, or how an existing agreement is likely to hold up under Nevada law.

Nevada divorces typically cost 36% less than the national average of $12,900.

Prenup landscape in Nevada

Property system
Community Property
Alimony framework
Judicial discretion
DV factor in property
No
Equal parenting presumption
No

Your prenup situation

Locked to Nevada on this page.

Do you have a prenuptial agreement? *

Use 0 if alimony is unlikely in your situation.

This estimate is for planning purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Consult a licensed family law attorney in your state for guidance specific to your situation.

Prenups in Nevada - Frequently Asked Questions

Are prenuptial agreements enforceable in Nevada?

Yes. Prenups are enforceable in Nevada when the basic procedural requirements are met: voluntary signing, full and fair financial disclosure, independent counsel for both parties (or a knowing waiver), and terms that are not unconscionable. As a community property state, Nevada courts apply prenups strictly to override the default 50/50 community-property split.

What can a prenup cover in Nevada?

In Nevada, a prenup can address property division, alimony (waiver, cap, or duration limits), debt allocation, business interests, inheritance protection, and how to handle a future home purchase. Prenups cannot dictate child custody or child support; those are reserved for the court to decide based on the child's best interests at the time of divorce.

How much does a prenup cost in Nevada?

Prenups in Nevada typically cost $1,500 to $5,000 total when both parties retain their own counsel. Higher-net-worth or complex agreements (business interests, multiple jurisdictions, trust planning) can run $5,000 to $25,000 or more. Skipping independent counsel saves money up front but is the single most common reason prenups are challenged later.

Can we do a postnuptial agreement instead in Nevada?

Yes, Nevada allows postnuptial agreements (postnups) signed during the marriage. Postnups address the same topics as prenups, but courts review them more strictly because the parties are already legally bound to each other. Independent counsel and full disclosure are even more important for a postnup to hold up.

How do Nevada courts evaluate a prenup?

Nevada courts ask: Was the agreement voluntary? Was there full financial disclosure? Did each party have or knowingly waive independent counsel? Are the terms unconscionable now? Is anything in it about children that the court must override? If the answer to all the procedural questions is yes and the substantive terms are not unconscionable, the prenup will generally be enforced as written.

This estimate is for planning purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Consult a licensed family law attorney in your state for guidance specific to your situation.