According to U. S. Census Bureau statistics, an increasing number of Americans are divorced, remarried or living as domestic partners (referred to as "cohabitation" by the Census Bureau).
A 2007 report from the Census Bureau shows that in 2004:
- 12 % of men and 13% of women had married twice.
- 3% of each had married three or more times.
- 58% of women and 54% of men age 15 and older had married only once.
What statistical studies do not show is the extent to which financial, estate and long term care planning help protect and sustain the fundamental needs of individuals once they depart their original marriage.
The trauma of going through a divorce, particularly if there are children involved, frequently causes both parties to lose sight of some of the long term financial safeguards they originally set up when they married and began their family. In addition, the financial stress that accompanies divorce often leads to significant cost cutting, with both sides often letting go of insurance plans that once seemed essential.
Couples beginning second marriages today face many complex issues that require them to rethink financial plans. For example, it is not uncommon for one or both parties to have offspring from their first marriage. Accordingly, when they consider remarrying, these couples frequently agree upon the need for a prenuptial agreement that will protect them against some of the legal and financial hurdles they faced when dissolving their first marriage.
Although their financial and emotional ties to their previous spouses have generally been severed, frequently both parties want the assets they are bringing to the second marriage to provide a legacy for the offspring of the first one. Vividly aware of the potential for divorce, many of these couples choose to keep totally separate bank accounts?EUR"and harbor the illusion that by doing so, they are limiting their financial responsibility for their second spouse.
But what these couples frequently do not realize is that the arrangements set forth in the prenuptial agreement only serve their purpose if either spouse requires little or no medical care.