Why people use these agreements
Significant Pre-Existing Assets
One partner owns a home, a business, or substantial investments before the relationship. Under default family law, the increase in value of those assets during the marriage can be subject to equalization or division at separation. An agreement can keep those assets separate, or define a specific sharing formula that reflects both parties' contributions and expectations. This is not just for the very wealthy, but also valuable for someone who owns a small business, a rental property, or a family cottage.
Children from Previous Relationships
Blended families have estate and property planning concerns that need to be addressed in writing. A parent may want to ensure that specific assets flow to children from a prior relationship rather than to a new spouse. A prenup or marriage contract is the appropriate instrument to document these intentions and give them legal weight.
Large Income or Wealth Disparity
When one partner earns significantly more, or brings substantially more wealth into the relationship, then both parties benefit from clear expectations. The higher earner may want defined and limited spousal support obligations; the lower earner may want a guaranteed minimum support arrangement that removes uncertainty. A well-drafted agreement serves both needs.
Resolving Conflicts in Married Couples
Postnuptial agreements can be used to resolve conflicts that could otherwise cause a couple to separate. Often a structured negotiation process guided by a mediator can assist a married couple to come to an agreement they would not be able to achieve by themselves.
Family or Business Pressure
It is common for family businesses to require a marriage contract as a condition of transfer, particularly those being transferred between generations. Parents who intend to gift or transfer significant assets often require this as well. In these cases, the agreement protects not just the couple but the family's legacy assets from an unknown future.
Common-Law Partners Without Automatic Property Rights
In most provinces, common-law partners do not automatically share property regardless of how long they have lived together. If the couple buys a home and only one name is on title, the other has no legal claim to it without an agreement or a successful constructive trust claim through the courts, which is expensive, uncertain, and emotionally draining. A cohabitation agreement prevents this entirely by defining ownership and entitlements from the start.
