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Practical clauses to include in a postnuptial agreement for fairness and clarity

A well drafted postnuptial agreement gives married couples clarity about finances and reduces the risk of costly disputes if the relationship breaks down. In England and Wales courts will give a postnuptial agreement weight where parties entered it freely with full financial disclosure and independent legal advice. Draft clauses that read clearly, allocate risk sensibly and anticipate future change. This guide lists practical clauses to include, explains why each matters, suggests drafting wording principles and offers a checklist to help solicitors and couples create balanced, enforceable agreements.

Why clause choice matters

Clauses translate broad intentions into enforceable steps. Vague or missing clauses create ambiguity and litigation. Courts examine content and process, so include objective mechanisms, evidence of disclosure and fallback rules that preserve fairness. Clear drafting also speeds negotiation, reduces valuation disputes and helps mediators or judges apply the parties’ intentions if they later disagree.

Core clauses every postnuptial agreement should include

1. Recitals and background facts

Purpose

Set out a plain English recital that identifies the parties, the marriage date and the factual background that explains why the agreement exists.

Why include it

Recitals frame the parties’ intentions and provide context for ambiguous terms. Courts review recitals to understand the negotiating position.

Drafting tip

Keep recitals concise and factual. Avoid emotive language or statements that imply coercion.

2. Definitions and interpretation

Purpose

Define key terms such as separate property, matrimonial property, net income, pension rights, business interests and valuation date.

Why include it

Precise definitions reduce argument about scope and meaning.

Drafting tip

Use consistent terminology across clauses and refer back to defined terms rather than repeating descriptions.

3. Scope and purpose clause

Purpose

State what the agreement covers and what it does not, and confirm it does not attempt to oust the court’s jurisdiction on children’s welfare.

Why include it

Courts will not enforce clauses that attempt to bind a child’s legal rights. A scope clause clarifies parties’ intentions and preserves flexibility.

Drafting tip

List inclusions and exclusions briefly and refer to attached schedules for detailed asset lists.

4. Full financial disclosure clause

Purpose

Record that both parties exchanged full and frank disclosure and identify the documents exchanged.

Why include it

Disclosure supports informed consent and strengthens enforceability.

Drafting tip

Attach a disclosure schedule as an exhibit and state that the schedules formed part of the agreement at signing.

5. Asset classification clause

Purpose

State which assets remain separate and which count as matrimonial property. Include rules for co‑mingling and conversion.

Why include it

Clear classification prevents disputes about whether specific property falls inside the matrimonial pot.

Drafting tip

Attach detailed schedules with property addresses company numbers wallet addresses and pension scheme identifiers.

6. Valuation clause

Purpose

Set methods for valuing businesses, property, pensions and volatile assets such as crypto.

Why include it

Disputed valuations create lengthy expert contests. Agreed methods and tie‑breaker rules reduce that risk.

Drafting tip

Specify valuation date, acceptable methodologies, a panel of valuers and a dispute resolution rule if valuers disagree by a material margin.

7. Treatment of the family home and occupancy rights

Purpose

Explain occupation rights, contribution accounting, and distribution on sale or separation.

Why include it

The family home usually drives most disputes. Clarify who lives where and how proceeds divide.

Drafting tip

Consider interim occupation arrangements and mechanisms for reimbursing one party for mortgage payments or improvements.

8. Pensions clause

Purpose

Set out pension sharing or offsetting arrangements and actuarial requirements for defined benefit schemes.

Why include it

Pensions often represent long term wealth; omission creates unfairness later.

Drafting tip

Name acceptable actuaries and agree valuation dates and methods for CETVs or capitalised values.

9. Business protection clause

Purpose

Protect business continuity by ring‑fencing pre‑marriage ownership, setting growth sharing rules, and creating buyout mechanisms.

Why include it

Businesses require governance and funding rules to avoid forced sales or operational disruption.

Drafting tip

Cross‑reference shareholder agreements and include pre‑emption and voting restrictions for transfers on separation.

10. Inheritance and gifts clause

Purpose

Confirm how current or future inheritances and family gifts will be treated and include co‑mingling rules.

Why include it

Families often want to preserve inheritances for children or other beneficiaries.

Drafting tip

Consider trusts or family investment companies to protect inheritance while addressing tax consequences.

11. Debts and liabilities clause

Purpose

Allocate responsibility for pre‑existing debts and set rules for new liabilities incurred during marriage.

Why include it

Debt allocation affects net asset calculations and exposure to creditors.

Drafting tip

State who pays what and how joint borrowing will be handled, and require prompt disclosure of new material liabilities.

12. Spousal maintenance and financial support clause

Purpose

Record agreed maintenance formulas, caps or opt‑out provisions while recognising court discretion on need.

Why include it

Courts will not enforce terms that leave a party in real need. A balanced clause reduces challenge risk.

Drafting tip

Use objective measures such as percentage of net income income bands or fixed transition payments, and include review triggers.

13. Children and childcare provision clause

Purpose

Set out parents’ intentions on interim support, education funding and capital provision for children while reserving court jurisdiction.

Why include it

You can document intentions but not bind the court. Use trusts or protected accounts for capital sums.

Drafting tip

Frame clauses as statements of intent with review triggers tied to schooling milestones or family events.

14. Review, update and sunset clause

Purpose

Provide for periodic reviews or automatic changes after events such as birth of children sale of a business or inheritance.

Why include it

Life changes can render terms obsolete. Built‑in reviews show foresight and fairness.

Drafting tip

Include clear trigger events and a timetable for renegotiation or defined conversions of terms after a set period.

15. Dispute resolution clause

Purpose

Require negotiation mediation then arbitration for financial disputes and reserve court access for urgent child matters.

Why include it

Layered dispute resolution reduces litigation, costs and publicity.

Drafting tip

Specify governing arbitration rules, seat and law, and preserve the right to seek injunctive relief in court for urgent risks.

16. Interim governance and asset preservation clause

Purpose

Set temporary controls on asset transfers, withdrawals and business decisions during disputes.

Why include it

Preventing dissipation protects the asset pool and reduces emergency litigation.

Drafting tip

Consider requiring joint consent for transfers above a threshold and appoint an independent custodian for liquid assets if disagreement arises.

17. Tax and costs allocation clause

Purpose

Allocate responsibility for tax liabilities arising from transfers and state who pays legal and valuation costs.

Why include it

Tax events can alter net outcomes dramatically. Clear allocation prevents later argument.

Drafting tip

Model likely tax impacts and include a tax gross‑up or netting mechanism where appropriate.

18. Confidentiality and non‑disparagement clause

Purpose

Protect private financial information and business reputation by limiting disclosure and public commentary.

Why include it

Family disputes can harm reputations and commercial relationships.

Drafting tip

Balance confidentiality with the need to disclose to legal advisers, trustees or courts and include measured non‑disparagement obligations.

19. Execution, certificates and witnesses clause

Purpose

Record details of signing, witnesses and solicitor certificates confirming independent advice.

Why include it

Formal evidence of advice and correct execution strengthens enforceability.

Drafting tip

Attach solicitor certificates and include a schedule listing witnesses, dates and locations of signing.

20. Ancillary schedules and exhibits

Purpose

Attach detailed asset lists, valuations, corporate documents, pension statements and legal opinions.

Why include it

Schedules provide the evidential foundation for the agreement and show what the parties knew at signing.

Drafting tip

Number exhibits, cross‑reference clauses and keep electronic and paper copies securely stored.

Drafting principles to improve enforceability

– Use plain, precise language: avoid ambiguous terms and legalese that courts may interpret unpredictably.

– Prefer objective formulas: percentages, income bands and fixed dates beat subjective terms.

– Provide fallback provisions: include reasonable safety nets such as limited maintenance or occupation rights so a spouse does not face sudden hardship.

– Document process thoroughly: keep dated drafts, solicitor letters, valuation reports and meeting notes to show informed voluntary negotiation.

– Allow adequate time: avoid signing under pressure and ensure each party has time to consider advice.

– Update when circumstances change: include review triggers and repeat disclosure and advice for any material amendment.

Practical checklist before signing a postnuptial agreement

– ensure both parties obtain independent legal advice and retain solicitor certificates

– exchange full documented disclosure covering assets liabilities pensions businesses and contingent rights

– attach detailed schedules with identifying information and recent valuations where needed

– include valuation methods and name acceptable valuers with a tie‑breaker rule

– set clear maintenance formulas or fallback provisions for fairness

– include dispute resolution with mediation and arbitration steps and a court carve‑out for urgent child welfare issues

– record signing formalities, witnesses and dates and store originals with solicitors

– plan periodic reviews and include trigger events such as inheritance business sales or births

Conclusion

A practical postnuptial agreement blends clarity, fairness and procedural rigour. Include clauses that define scope, classify assets, set valuation methods, address pensions and businesses, and provide dispute resolution and review mechanisms. Draft objectively, attach detailed schedules and document the negotiation thoroughly to maximise the agreement’s persuasive force in English and Welsh courts. Work with experienced family law solicitors like us, valuers and tax advisers to tailor clauses to your circumstances and to preserve both parties’ interests while reducing the risk of future litigation.

At Alexander JLO we have many years of experience of dealing with all aspects of family law and will be happy to discuss your case in a free no obligation consultation. Why not call us on +44 (0)20 7537 7000, email us at info@london-law.co.uk or get in touch via the contact us button and see what we can do for you?

This blog was prepared by Peter Johnson on 14th November 2025 and is correct at the time of going to press. With over forty years of experience in almost all areas of law Peter is happy to assist with any legal issue that you have. He is widely regarded as one of London’s leading divorce lawyers. His profile on the independent Review Solicitor website can be found Here. To follow up on any of the above please contact Guy Wilton of our family department. Guy has wide experience of acting for the firm’s clients, their family and their businesses. Guy’s experience as a lawyer started in the Northern and Welsh Circuits, including the Liverpool Courts, where he represented numerous clients after being called to the Bar, before opting to join Alexander JLO in 2017 and qualifying as a solicitor in 2024. He is a highly experienced family lawyer with a particular interest in financial remedy proceedings and child contact disputes.

Guy’s profile on the independent Review Solicitor website can be viewed here.