Financial Disclosure Builder

Prepare a clean financial disclosure exhibit for attachment to a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement — assets, debts, income, and net worth, with print-ready output.

Instructions

Enter your name, the "as of" date, and (if known) the exhibit letter your attorney has assigned. Then work through each section and add a row for every asset, debt, and income figure that applies to you. Leave a section empty if it doesn't apply.

For each row, briefly describe the item and enter its current value. The "Source / Basis of Value" column is where you note how you arrived at the number — for example, "December statement," "Zillow estimate," or "Kelley Blue Book." Mortgages and vehicle loans are entered on the same row as the asset they secure; all other debts go in the Liabilities section at the bottom.

Your information stays in your browser. Nothing is transmitted to Resurgens or any server. Your work is saved locally so you can close this tab and return to it later. Use Clear all data below if you want to wipe everything and start over.

Step 1 Identify yourself
Step 2 List your assets
Step 3 Enter income
Step 4 List liabilities
Output Generate exhibit

Accounts & Investments

All bank accounts, brokerage and retirement accounts, employer equity (RSUs / options), and digital currency. Choose a type for each row and the fields will adjust. Use the equity row only for vested grants; unvested RSUs or options belong in the Contingent & Unvested Interests section at the bottom.

Subtotal: $0

Real Property

Houses, condos, land, and any other real estate you own or co-own. Enter the property's fair market value and the current mortgage balance — net equity is calculated automatically.

Subtotal: $0

Vehicles

Cars, trucks, motorcycles, boats, RVs, and similar titled vehicles. Enter the value and any loan balance — net equity is calculated automatically.

Subtotal: $0

Business Interests

Companies you own or hold an interest in — LLCs, partnerships, professional practices, closely-held corporations. Enter the total value of the business and your ownership percentage; your share is calculated automatically.

Subtotal: $0

Tangible Personal Property

Items of meaningful value: art, jewelry, collectibles, electronics, family heirlooms, and significant furniture. Items of insignificant value need not be individually listed. Ordinary household items — most furniture, kitchenware, clothing, and the like — should be grouped into a single bulk entry (e.g., "Household furnishings and personal effects — bulk estimate") rather than itemized. Only break out a piece individually if it has unique significance or notable personal or monetary value.

Subtotal: $0

Intangible & Other Assets

Assets without a physical form or account statement — airline miles or hotel points, gift cards, intellectual property, royalty rights, domain names, equity club memberships, season tickets / PSLs, and similar items. Use this section only for assets you currently own with an ascertainable value. If the value is contingent or unvested, use the Contingent & Unvested Interests section at the bottom.

Subtotal: $0

Life Insurance

Permanent / whole life policies with cash value. Term policies have no cash value and don't need to be listed unless you want to disclose them for completeness — enter $0 in that case.

Subtotal: $0

Trust Interests

Beneficial interests in trusts — whether you are a current beneficiary, a contingent beneficiary, or have a power of appointment. If the value is uncertain or unknown, enter $0 and explain in the Notes field.

Subtotal: $0

Money Held by Others

Funds belonging to you that are in someone else's possession or name — for example, money held by a parent, a holdback in escrow, or amounts in a custodial arrangement.

Subtotal: $0

Accounts Receivable

Amounts owed to you — personal loans you've made, judgments in your favor, deferred compensation owed by an employer, etc.

Subtotal: $0

Gross Income

Your gross (pre-tax) income from all sources — wages, self-employment, distributions, investment income — for the current year-to-date and each of the prior three years.

Liabilities

All debts except mortgages and vehicle loans (those go on their asset row). Includes credit cards, personal loans, commercial loans, promissory notes, student loans, and tax debts.

Subtotal: $0

Contingent & Unvested Interests

For disclosure only — these entries are not included in your Total Assets. Use this section for interests that have not vested, have not been realized, or whose value cannot be reasonably ascertained: unvested RSUs / options, deferred compensation, pending tax refunds, pending lawsuits or settlement claims, anticipated inheritances, and similar contingent rights. Describe the nature of the contingency and, if known, an estimated value.

Subtotal: $0 Disclosure only — not in Total Assets
Total Assets $0
Total Liabilities $0
Net Worth $0

Your work is saved automatically in this browser.

About the Financial Disclosure Builder

A prenuptial or postnuptial agreement is far more likely to hold up if each party makes a full and fair financial disclosure before signing. Georgia courts weigh several factors when deciding whether to enforce these agreements — see Scherer v. Scherer, 249 Ga. 635 (1982) — and whether each party disclosed their assets and liabilities is central. Omissions or material understatements can render an agreement voidable.

This builder helps you prepare the disclosure exhibit that attaches to the agreement: accounts and investments, real property, vehicles, business interests, other assets, income, and liabilities, with an automatic net-worth summary. Each row includes a "source / basis of value" field so the numbers are documented, and the result prints cleanly for attachment as a labeled exhibit.

Your information stays in your browser — nothing is transmitted to Resurgens or any server, and your work is saved locally. To make sure your agreement and its disclosures are prepared correctly, schedule a consultation with Resurgens Legal Counsel.

Frequently asked questions

Why is financial disclosure required for a prenuptial agreement?
Georgia courts consider whether a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement was entered into with full and fair disclosure of each party's assets and liabilities. Adequate disclosure makes the agreement far more likely to be enforced; inadequate disclosure can make it voidable.
What should be included in a prenup financial disclosure?
A disclosure should list your assets — accounts, real property, vehicles, business interests, and other holdings — along with your debts, income, and resulting net worth, with a basis of value noted for each item.
What is the difference between a prenuptial and a postnuptial agreement?
A prenuptial agreement is signed before marriage; a postnuptial agreement is signed after the couple is already married. Both address how property and support are handled, and both depend on full financial disclosure to be enforceable.
Does a prenup have to list every single asset?
The goal is full and fair disclosure of your financial picture, including material assets and debts. Minor household items can be grouped as a bulk estimate rather than itemized, but anything of meaningful value should be disclosed with an ascertainable value.
Is my information saved or sent to the firm?
No. Everything you enter stays in your browser and is never transmitted to Resurgens Legal Counsel or any server. Your work is saved locally so you can return to it, and you can clear all data at any time.