
In North Carolina, marital property law defaults to equitable distribution. That means a court decides how your property is split if you divorce, and "equitable" doesn't always mean equal. The house you owned before the marriage. The business you started. The retirement account you've been funding for fifteen years. All of it can end up in the middle of a courtroom argument unless you have a written agreement that says otherwise.
The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V helps clients in Catawba and Alexander County protect what they came in with and what they're building together.
People avoid prenups for two reasons. One: they think it signals distrust. Two: they don't know where to start.
The first concern is understandable. The second is fixable.
Here's what actually happens without an agreement. You marry. You build a life. Years pass. A business grows. Real estate appreciates. Inheritances come in. If the marriage ends, a judge in Catawba County sorts it out. North Carolina law presumes marital property is divided between the two of you. That includes appreciation on property you owned before the wedding if marital funds touched it. It includes business value your spouse had no role in creating. It includes debt one person ran up.
The other risk is timing. A prenuptial agreement has to be signed before the wedding. Once you're married, the window closes. You can do a postnuptial agreement, but courts scrutinize those more closely. The strongest protection is the one you get in writing before the ceremony.
Waiting doesn't protect the relationship. It just removes your options.
Ed Hedrick drafts prenuptial and postnuptial agreements that hold up. Not templates pulled from the internet. Actual contracts reviewed under North Carolina law, written to address your specific assets, your income situation, and your concerns.
Covering alimony and spousal support terms
If you already have an agreement your partner’s attorney drafted, Ed Hedrick can review it before you sign. That review matters. An agreement that looks balanced on the surface can contain clauses that cost you significantly if the marriage ends.
Ed Hedrick is a licensed North Carolina attorney and member of the NC State Bar. He handles family law cases at the Alexander County courthouse and the Catawba County courthouse in Newton. When a dispute reaches litigation, he’s already been in those rooms.
You call (828) 635-4168 . You get a real answer or a fast callback. You tell Ed where you are in the process: engaged, recently married, or reviewing an agreement you've received.
Ed walks through your assets, your concerns, and what North Carolina law allows. No pressure. No sales pitch. You leave the consultation understanding your options.
Ed identifies the specific terms that protect what matters most to you: your property, your business, your retirement, your debt exposure. He explains what courts here enforce and what they push back on.
Ed drafts the agreement from scratch or reviews the one you've been handed. If he finds problems, he tells you plainly. If the draft is solid, he says so.
The agreement is signed, witnessed, and executed correctly before the ceremony or, for a postnup, with proper legal formality. Done right the first time.
Ed Hedrick has practiced law in this part of North Carolina for years. His office is at 22 West Main Avenue in Taylorsville. He’s not commuting from Charlotte to handle your case and billing you for travel time.
He knows the courthouses. He’s appeared at the Alexander County courthouse and the Catawba County courthouse in Newton on family law matters. When a prenuptial agreement is challenged after a divorce filing, local courtroom experience matters. An agreement that looks fine on paper can still fail if it wasn’t executed properly or if the terms aren’t enforceable under current NC case law.
Clients choose Ed Hedrick because he answers the phone. Because he’s direct about what the law allows and what it doesn’t. Because he’s in Taylorsville, not on the other side of the state.
You contact a big-city firm out of Charlotte or Raleigh. A paralegal takes your information. You wait for a callback. The attorney you eventually meet has a caseload that doesn’t have much room for a prenuptial agreement that isn’t tied to a high-asset divorce. You get a template dressed up as custom work. You pay a premium for the firm’s overhead.
Or you find a form online. It looks official. You both sign it. Years later, a family law judge looks at it and finds that it doesn’t meet North Carolina’s requirements for a valid prenuptial agreement. Now you’re in equitable distribution proceedings anyway, except you thought you were protected.
Here’s what happens with The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V:
you call, you talk to Ed, he drafts an agreement that fits your situation and meets NC enforceability standards, he explains it in plain language before you sign, and the agreement is executed correctly. If you ever need it, it holds up.
| Option | Limitation | The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V |
|---|---|---|
| Online prenup templates | Not reviewed under NC law, often missing required provisions, frequently unenforceable | Custom-drafted agreement under NC law with proper execution |
| Big-city firm (Charlotte, Raleigh) | Higher overhead, less local availability, attorney unfamiliar with local court preferences | Local attorney practicing at Alexander and Catawba County courthouses |
| No agreement at all | NC equitable distribution law controls the outcome, not your wishes | Written agreement that defines your terms before a court ever gets involved |
| Reviewing it yourself | Legal language is technical, enforceability depends on specific NC statutory requirements | Attorney review before you sign anything |
Ed Hedrick provides a clear fee estimate at the consultation. You know what you’re paying before work begins. No billing surprises.
Call (828) 635-4168 or email office@edhedrickattorney.com to get a specific number based on your situation.
That framing puts emotion ahead of practicality. A prenup is a document that says: here's what each of us owns going in, and here's what we've agreed should happen if things change. Plenty of strong marriages have one. Having the conversation before the wedding is better than having it in front of a judge after.
Under NC law, a prenuptial agreement must be in writing, signed by both parties, and executed voluntarily. Courts will look at whether both parties had a fair opportunity to review the agreement and whether either party was pressured into signing. Having independent legal review for both parties strengthens enforceability significantly.
No. NC courts won't enforce prenup clauses that try to limit child support or custody rights. Those are decided based on the child's best interest at the time of any dispute. Alimony and property division terms are generally enforceable if the agreement meets NC's requirements.
Yes. After the wedding, you can execute a postnuptial agreement. The process is similar, but courts apply additional scrutiny to postnups. The fairness of the terms and the absence of any coercion matter more. Ed Hedrick handles both prenuptial and postnuptial agreements.
The agreement goes before a judge. The court looks at whether it was executed correctly, whether both parties understood what they were signing, and whether the terms are enforceable under NC law. An agreement drafted by an attorney and executed properly is significantly harder to challenge than a template or an agreement one party signed without legal counsel.
The earlier the better. Rushing a prenuptial agreement raises red flags in court. Both parties need time to review it, consult with their own counsel if they choose, and negotiate terms without feeling pressured by a pending ceremony date. Starting two to three months out gives you room to do it right.
Yes. That review is important. If you've been handed an agreement and told to sign, get a second set of eyes on it before you do. Ed Hedrick will tell you what the agreement actually says, what it protects, and where the gaps are.

You’ve got one window to get this done before the wedding. Don’t use a form you found online. Don’t assume you’ll figure it out later. Call The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V now.
Call: (828) 635-4168
Email: office@edhedrickattorney.com
Address: 22 West Main Avenue, Taylorsville, NC
Ed Hedrick is a licensed NC State Bar attorney with years of family law experience in Catawba and Alexander County. Call today and get a consultation scheduled.
If your hearing or ceremony is on the horizon, the time to handle this is now. Clients across Hickory, Taylorsville, Newton, Conover, Catawba, Maiden, Hiddenite, and Stony Point have walked into the Alexander County and Catawba County courthouses thinking they were protected. Some of them weren’t. A prenuptial agreement drafted by a local attorney who knows NC family law is the difference between an outcome you chose and one a judge chose for you.
Call (828) 635-4168.
We don’t blink.
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