There is a long-standing misunderstanding that prenups are only for affluent people who want to avoid alimony. Millennial generation is changing the paradigm and finding that marriage contracts are valuable for most income levels, especially when one of the spouses has school credits or business debts or has been married before. Many Millennials have understood that a prenup is an opportunity to pre-negotiate and guarantee a minimum/maximum amount of alimony. They approach the agreement as a team as part of their wedding planning and marry with confidence. It is possible that some relevant characteristics, unique to millennials (born in 1981-1996), contributed to the adoption by their generation of pre-marital agreements. Millennials marry later than previous generations. In 1965, the average American woman married for the first time at the age of 21, and the typical American man married at 23. Until 2017, these figures rose to 27 for women and 29.5 years for men.