Skip to content
Email WhatsApp Call Text
StepUp Law

How Much Does a Prenup Cost in Florida?

A few thousand dollars now, or many times that in a divorce or estate fight later. The prenup is the cheap part.

The Short Version

A Florida prenup commonly runs from a couple of thousand dollars to the mid five figures, depending on complexity. A simple agreement between two people with straightforward finances is inexpensive. One involving a business, multiple properties, or a blended-family estate plan costs more, because there is more to value, disclose, and negotiate. We quote a flat fee at your free consult, so you know the number before you commit.

What Drives the Price

Why a Cheap Template Is the Expensive Option

An unenforceable prenup is worse than none: it gives false security and collapses when you need it. Florida throws one out when there was no fair financial disclosure, when someone was pressured into signing, or when the terms are unconscionable. A download cannot ensure disclosure, independent advice, or proper timing, and it misses the Florida estate pieces. The few hundred dollars saved can cost the whole agreement.

Get a flat-fee number, no surprises.

A free 30-minute consult sizes up your situation and quotes the fee up front.

Book your free consult

Frequently Asked Questions

How Much Does a Prenup Cost in Florida?

It depends on complexity. A straightforward agreement between two people with simple finances costs far less than one involving a business, multiple properties, or a blended family. In the Florida market, prenups commonly run from a couple of thousand dollars up to the mid five figures for complex estates. Because each spouse should have their own attorney review it, budget for two sets of fees, though one side’s review is usually lighter. We quote a flat fee at the free consult so there are no surprises.

Why Not Just Use an Online Template?

Because an unenforceable prenup is worse than none, it gives false security and falls apart exactly when you need it. Florida sets the agreement aside if there was no fair financial disclosure, if someone was pressured into signing, or if the terms are unconscionable. A template cannot ensure disclosure, independent advice, or proper timing, and it usually misses the Florida-specific estate pieces (waiving the elective share and homestead rights). The few hundred dollars you save can cost the entire thing.

What Makes a Prenup More Expensive?

Business interests (which need valuation and coordination with a buy-sell), real estate in more than one state, significant or unequal assets and debts, support (alimony) terms, and blended-family estate provisions. The more there is to protect and disclose, the more drafting and negotiation it takes. Simpler situations are quick and inexpensive.

Is a Prenup Cheaper Than the Alternative?

Almost always. A prenup is a known, one-time flat fee. Litigating property division in a divorce, or a surviving spouse’s elective-share claim against your estate, can cost many times more and take years. The prenup is the inexpensive insurance policy.


Updated on June 9, 2026. Reviewed by Kevin D. Klagge, Esq., Fla. Bar No. 99502. General information, not legal advice. Advertised fees are honored as required by the Rules Regulating The Florida Bar; government costs are extra. Each spouse should have independent counsel. Do not send confidential information until we have agreed to represent you.

Chat with StepUp Law

Connecting…