The Patriot Post® · Swift to Kelce: 'You Belong With Me' ... After a $2B Prenup
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s reported prenuptial agreement has become one of the most talked-about aspects of their recent wedding. Considering Swift’s lucrative entertainment empire, it’s hardly surprising that she’d want to protect what she earned.
What is surprising is that prenups are no longer just for celebrities and billionaires. More average couples are expecting them to be signed before walking down the aisle. Once considered something reserved for the ultra-wealthy, prenuptial agreements have quietly become part of mainstream marriage — reflecting a much broader cultural shift in how people approach lifelong commitment.
Younger Americans are marrying later, bringing more assets, businesses, investments, retirement accounts, and even student debt into marriage than previous generations. As such, a prenup is no longer viewed by many as pessimistic or as a signal of mistrust — it is marketed as simply being practical, and today’s modern couples are signing on the dotted line.
For Taylor Swift, the reasoning seems obvious. It isn’t a secret that the pop star with a decades-long career holds a fortune estimated in the billions, ownership of one of the most valuable music catalogs in the world, extensive real estate holdings, and countless business partnerships. Protecting what she built makes financial sense. Reports indicate that the agreement was designed to clearly separate premarital assets while preserving privacy surrounding their finances and future business ventures.
As Law Commentary explains, “For lawyers and financial planners, the legal issue is less about celebrity and more about scale.” Per the state where the contract would be laid out and signed, “In New York, marital property generally includes property acquired during the marriage, while separate property includes property acquired before marriage, certain gifts and inheritances, and property designated as separate by written agreement. New York Domestic Relations Law § 236 also allows parties to enter into agreements before or during marriage that address the ownership, division, and distribution of separate and marital property.”
What has caught many people’s attention, however, is Travis Kelce’s reported willingness to sign his name without hesitation. According to the culture website The Blast, those close to the couple described the prenup not as a loyalty test, but as a practical acknowledgment that Taylor built her fortune long before Travis entered the picture — and that she isn’t obligated to share what she earned before the marriage, even with her husband. Kelce reportedly viewed the agreement not as a sign of distrust, but as a way of respecting everything she had accomplished before they met.
A source close to the couple explained, “Travis has a very clear sense of what Taylor has created and how many years went into it. He views the prenup as basic common sense on her part, not some kind of loyalty test, and snapped up the deal when it was put in front of him and his lawyers.”
The mindset of the newlyweds was simple: protecting existing assets doesn’t diminish genuine commitment. For a power couple like Swift and Kelce, that logic is easy enough to understand. Yet for most people, marriage isn’t about safeguarding a lifetime of extraordinary wealth or protecting a business empire they’ve spent decades building.
There is no question that discussing money before the wedding and having difficult financial conversations up front actually strengthens communication and removes uncertainty should the worst happen. As for couples entering marriage with businesses, inheritances, children from previous relationships, or vastly different financial situations, there are certainly practical reasons why a prenup may be appropriate.
Yet today, financial planners and attorneys are making it part of their common practice to advise couples to legally separate their earnings, assets, and savings before they’ve even said “I do,” sending the message that the marriage is already being built with one eye on the exit.
Still, as prenups become increasingly normalized, some wonder whether it’s just our views about financial planning that are changing.
Free Press columnist Arthur Brooks argues that our growing comfort with prenups may reveal something deeper than just trying to be responsible with personal finances. In his recent essay on the subject, he suggests that while a prenup may protect certain assets, he warns that if your first big conversation is about what happens if you get divorced, it subtly changes the foundation of your marriage.
“Every couple is different, and has its own history and peculiar circumstances,” Brooks says. “But in general, the research strongly suggests that marrying without a financial hedge against divorce and committing to mutual trust and compromise about money are self-fulfilling prophecies about the power of love and faith. Divorce feels less like an option, especially early on when couples are figuring out how to live together in captivity. Learning how to share money and collaborate on financial decisions builds trust across the whole relationship.”
One of Brooks’s strongest points centers on how couples manage money after they marry. Successful marriages, he argues, are built on shared ownership and shared sacrifice. When two people begin viewing their income as “our money” instead of “my money” and “your money,” they reinforce the idea that they’re building one household, one future, and one family. Managing finances together isn’t simply about paying bills. It’s a daily reminder that both spouses are pulling in the same direction.
That idea extends well beyond bank accounts. Marriage works best when two lives genuinely become one. Decisions about careers, children, housing, retirement, vacations, and even everyday spending become shared goals rather than competing individual priorities. The more a couple views themselves as teammates instead of independent contractors sharing an address, the stronger that partnership often becomes.
Perhaps that’s one reason marriage feels increasingly fragile today. Many couples aren’t simply planning a wedding anymore — they’re planning for the possibility of divorce before the marriage has even begun. Even if a prenup is financially prudent, it inevitably asks two people to spend part of their engagement imagining how they’ll divide their lives if everything falls apart. Whether intentional or not, it can create the feeling that one foot is planted in the marriage while the other remains ready to walk away.
None of this means every prenup is wrong. Some situations genuinely call for one. But no legal document has ever created trust, loyalty, sacrifice, or love. Those things are built day after day through shared purpose and shared commitment.
Every worthwhile part of life requires that mindset. Nobody accepts a new job expecting to quit a month later. Nobody boards an airplane for vacation planning to leave halfway through the trip. Success comes from showing up consistently, putting in the work, and remaining committed when things become difficult.
Marriage deserves that same attitude. If there’s anything in life worth giving our absolute best effort to, it should be the promise a husband and wife make to spend their lives building something together.