- Yes, prenups are enforceable in New Hampshire — when properly executed under RSA 460:2-a.
- The most common reason prenups are invalidated: incomplete or fraudulent financial disclosure.
- Independent counsel is not required but significantly strengthens enforceability.
- New Hampshire has its own statutory standards for prenup enforcement under RSA 460:2-a.
New Hampshire's enforceability standard
Under RSA 460:2-a, New Hampshire courts will enforce a prenup that was executed voluntarily by both parties with adequate financial disclosure. Courts examine the totality of the circumstances to determine whether the agreement should be upheld.
Common reasons prenups get thrown out
Courts in New Hampshire and across the country invalidate prenups for a handful of recurring reasons. Understanding these is the best way to make sure your agreement holds up.
- **Incomplete financial disclosure.** This is the number one reason prenups fail. If either party hid assets, understated income, or failed to disclose debts, the entire agreement is at risk. New Hampshire law requires full financial disclosure as a condition of enforceability.
- **Involuntary signing (duress or coercion).** A prenup signed under pressure — especially close to the wedding date — is vulnerable to a duress challenge. New Hampshire has no statutory waiting period, but courts scrutinize prenups signed within days of the wedding. Signing at least 30 days in advance is recommended.
- **No opportunity for independent counsel.** While New Hampshire doesn't require independent counsel, courts look favorably on agreements where both parties had their own attorney.
- **Unconscionable terms.** If a prenup is so one-sided that enforcing it would be fundamentally unfair, courts can refuse to enforce it. This is evaluated either at the time of signing, at the time of enforcement (divorce), or both — depending on the state.
- **Fraud or misrepresentation.** If one party lied about material facts — such as income, debts, or asset values — the agreement can be voided entirely.
New Hampshire-specific requirements for a valid prenup
Beyond the general standards above, New Hampshire has requirements that are specific to the state:
- **Notarization:** Recommended but not legally required. A notarized agreement is significantly harder to challenge.
- **Witnesses:** Not legally required, but recommended for additional enforceability protection.
- **Financial disclosure:** Required by statute. Incomplete disclosure is grounds for invalidation.
- **Spousal support:** Waivers are generally enforceable if the overall agreement meets validity requirements.
- **Sunset clauses:** Enforceable. The prenup can include an expiration date.
How to protect your prenup's enforceability
- Complete full financial disclosure — both parties, all assets, all debts, all income sources
- Sign well in advance of the wedding — at least 30 days is recommended
- Both parties should have independent legal counsel review the agreement
- Get the agreement notarized — it's the strongest protection against fraud challenges
- Keep terms reasonable — avoid provisions so one-sided they could be deemed unconscionable
- Document everything — save drafts, emails, and notes showing the timeline and voluntary process
Build an enforceable New Hampshire prenup on Clause
Clause generates state-specific prenuptial agreements designed for enforceability. The Agreement Builder walks both partners through full financial disclosure, handles New Hampshire's signing requirements automatically, and produces a document that addresses every enforceability factor courts look for. Starting at $549 for both partners — with optional attorney review and online notarization.
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 New Hampshire.