Describe your situation in plain language. SignAI generates a complete, Texas-compliant Prenuptial Agreement — then sign and send it to your partner. No templates, no lawyers, no hassle.
Prenuptial Agreement
State of Texas
60s
Average creation time
$0
Free to create & sign
100%
100% Legally binding in TX
0
Templates to search
Texas is one of nine community property states. Under Texas Family Code §3.002, all property acquired during marriage is presumed to be community property — owned equally by both spouses. Texas governs prenuptial agreements under Texas Family Code Chapter 4 (§4.001–§4.010), based on the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act. A prenup is the primary mechanism for overriding Texas's community property default.
Whether you're a Houston energy executive with oil and gas interests, a Dallas tech entrepreneur with startup equity, an Austin musician with publishing royalties, or a San Antonio real estate investor, a prenup is especially critical in Texas because of the community property presumption. Without one, all income earned and property purchased during marriage belongs equally to both spouses.
SignAI generates your Texas prenuptial agreement with proper legal language — including compliance with Texas Family Code Chapter 4, community property override provisions, and governing law clauses for Texas courts.
How it works
No templates, no forms, no lawyers. Just describe what you need.
Type something like "I need a Prenup for Texas" — no legal jargon needed. Answer a few quick follow-up questions and you're done.
AI generates a complete, Texas-specific Prenup in seconds — with proper headings, numbered sections, and signature blocks. Edit anything you want, then type your name to sign.
Enter the other party's email and hit send. They review and sign without creating an account. Both parties get a copy. Done.
What's included
Every Prenup generated by SignAI for Texas includes these essential provisions — automatically.
A detailed schedule of each party's separate property, assets, debts, and obligations — essential in Texas's community property system.
Provisions altering Texas's default 50/50 community property split, defining what stays separate and what becomes community property.
Provisions addressing spousal maintenance under Texas Family Code §8.051–§8.055. Texas limits maintenance to specific circumstances — a prenup can modify these rules.
Full disclosure schedules for both parties, supporting enforceability under Texas Family Code §4.006.
Clauses protecting oil and gas interests, business ownership, mineral rights, and professional practice value from community property claims.
Governing law clause specifying Texas jurisdiction, compliance with Texas Family Code Chapter 4, and venue selection for Texas courts.
Use cases
People in Texas use SignAI to create Prenups for a wide range of situations. Here are the most popular:
Keep mineral rights, working interests, and royalty income classified as separate property. Houston is the energy capital of the world.
Try it: “I need a prenup to protect my oil and gas interests before getting married in Houston”
Shield startup equity, RSUs, and venture-backed company interests from community property division. Austin's tech scene rivals Silicon Valley.
Try it: “I'm a startup founder in Austin and need a prenup before my wedding”
Keep rental properties and real estate investments separate in Texas's community property framework. Critical in Dallas and San Antonio's booming markets.
Try it: “I own rental properties in Dallas and need a prenup to keep them as separate property”
Prevent a divorce from forcing the sale or division of a medical practice, law firm, or other professional enterprise.
Try it: “I own a medical practice in San Antonio and need a prenup before getting married”
FAQ
Yes. Texas Family Code Chapter 4 (§4.001–§4.010) provides the framework for enforceable prenuptial agreements. The agreement must be in writing, signed voluntarily, and not unconscionable. Texas courts enforce prenups that meet these requirements, and the party challenging the agreement bears the burden of proof.
Texas is a community property state (Texas Family Code §3.002). All income earned and property acquired during marriage belongs equally to both spouses — a strict 50/50 split by default. A prenup is the only way to override this presumption and keep assets classified as separate property.
Texas already limits spousal maintenance to specific situations (Texas Family Code §8.051–§8.055) — the marriage must last at least 10 years, or there must be family violence, disability, or a child with special needs. A prenup can further modify or waive these rights, subject to unconscionability review.
Under Texas Family Code §4.006, a prenup is unenforceable if the challenging party shows they didn't receive fair and reasonable disclosure and didn't voluntarily waive it. While Texas courts have upheld prenups with minimal disclosure, full disclosure is strongly recommended. SignAI includes disclosure schedules.
Yes. Without a prenup, the increase in value of a business during marriage due to either spouse's efforts is community property — subject to 50/50 division. A prenup can classify the entire business interest, including growth, as separate property, keeping it out of community property division.
Pricing
No credit card. No per-document fees. Start with 3 free documents including full e-signature support.
Create your first AI-generated legal document for free.
Need one more document? No subscription required.
For professionals who regularly need legal documents.