Idaho is a community property state. All assets and income acquired during marriage are owned equally by both spouses. Idaho is strict about maintaining the character of separate property — any commingling with community funds risks converting separate assets to community property. A prenup documents pre-marital assets clearly and establishes rules for keeping them separate throughout the marriage.
Your Clause prenup explicitly defines which property is separate and which is marital, overriding Idaho's default 50/50 community property split with terms you both agree on.
Attorney-drafted prenups typically cost $5,000 to $20,000 combined. Here's how Clause compares:
Yes. Idaho has adopted the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act (Idaho Code § 32-917 et seq.), which sets clear standards for enforcement. Courts uphold prenups that are in writing, signed by both parties with full financial disclosure, and free from fraud, duress, or unconscionable terms.
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