I'm a family law attorney. I've found my Gen Z clients are more willing to talk openly about finances - and prenups
Briefly

Gen Z has reduced the stigma around discussing personal finances, making conversations about income, spending, and debt common between partners. Young adults routinely ask about salary, house costs, spending habits, and outstanding debt. Decisions about having children and whether one partner will stop working are treated as explicit choices rather than assumed outcomes. Many couples expect to maintain two incomes. Prenuptial agreements have become more accepted and are viewed as a standard part of financial planning rather than a prediction of divorce. Gen Zers approach prenups proactively, often motivated by career aspirations and perceived future earning potential rather than existing family wealth.
I'm a millennial. My parents always told me, "We don't talk about money." You're not supposed to ask about how much money anybody makes. You don't ask somebody how much they spent on their house or how much something costs. What are their spending habits? How much debt does somebody have? Even when I was dating, it wasn't a discussed factor. Gen Zers have opened up the door to talking about it.
Whether or not someone will stop working is definitely on the back burner. Everyone is on board that we have to be a two-income household. Gen Z is absolutely more open to prenups. I can see the trend that prenups are not this, "Oh no, if we're doing this, we're going to get divorced." It's just another one of those check boxes of things that you do now for financial planning.
Read at Business Insider
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