- District of Columbia is an equitable distribution state — courts divide assets based on fairness, not an automatic 50/50 split.
- Notarization is recommended but not required for prenups in District of Columbia.
- Witnesses are recommended but not legally required.
- Full financial disclosure by both parties is required by law.
- District of Columbia has no mandatory waiting period, but signing at least 30 days before the wedding is recommended.
How District of Columbia classifies marital property
District of Columbia uses equitable distribution to divide marital property at divorce. Courts consider each spouse’s income, contributions to the marriage, length of the marriage, and other factors — but “equitable” doesn’t mean equal. The process is governed by D.C. Code § 46-501 et seq., which gives courts a structured framework for evaluating the agreement. A prenup lets you define your own division rules in advance, removing uncertainty about how a court might split your assets.
Understanding District of Columbia's equitable distribution system is critical because a prenup is essentially your opportunity to override these default rules. Without one, a judge decides what's "fair" based on subjective factors like each spouse's income, contributions, and future needs.
The legal framework: UPAA
District of Columbia has adopted the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act (UPAA), codified as D.C. Code § 46-501 et seq.. This means prenup formation and enforcement follow a well-established statutory framework shared by 27 other states.
Signing requirements in District of Columbia
District of Columbia has specific requirements that must be met for a prenuptial agreement to be valid. Missing any of these can give a court grounds to throw out the entire agreement.
- **Written agreement** — Must be in writing — verbal prenups are not valid
- **Signed by both parties** — Both parties must sign voluntarily before the wedding
- **Notarization recommended** — Not legally required but strongly advised for court enforceability
- **Independent legal counsel recommended** — Each party should have their own attorney review the agreement
- **Full financial disclosure** — Both parties must disclose all assets, debts, and income — incomplete disclosure is the #1 reason prenups are invalidated
Spousal support in a District of Columbia prenup
Spousal support waivers are generally enforceable in District of Columbia prenups, provided the agreement meets all other legal requirements — voluntary execution, full financial disclosure, and terms that are not unconscionable.
Sunset clauses and special provisions
District of Columbia courts will enforce sunset clauses — provisions that cause the prenup to expire after a set number of years. If you want the agreement to remain in effect indefinitely, make sure to exclude a sunset clause or explicitly state that the agreement has no expiration.
Build your District of Columbia prenup on Clause
Clause generates a legally valid, District of Columbia-specific prenuptial agreement starting at $549 — a fraction of the $5,000–$20,000 that traditional attorney-drafted prenups cost in District of Columbia. The Agreement Builder automatically handles District of Columbia's signing requirements, and financial disclosure obligations. Attorney review and online notarization are available as add-ons.
Clause is not a law firm and this article is not legal advice. For guidance specific to your situation, consult a licensed family law attorney in District of Columbia.