As part of the parties’ judgment of divorce nisi, a Probate and Family Court judge held an antenuptial agreement (agreement) was invalid only insofar as it precluded the wife from receiving alimony. The husband appealed from the judgments, including the judge’s award of alimony to the wife, and the Appeals Court affirmed. Austin v. Austin, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 719 (2004). We granted the husband’s application for further appellate review, limited to the enforceability of the agreement. Because we conclude that the agreement was valid at the time it was executed and fair and reasonable at the time of divorce, we vacate so much of the judgment that awards alimony payments to the wife.
Facts and .procedural background. The parties met in 1984 *602and lived together from 1986 until 1988. They were married in May, 1989. Two days prior to the marriage, on May 11, 1989, the couple executed the agreement. The judge found that the husband made the marriage conditional on the signing of the agreement and that the wife “was not thrilled” about signing. Both parties sought the advice of legal counsel, but it was the draft prepared by the wife’s counsel that the parties executed. Separate lists of each of the parties’ assets were attached to the agreement as exhibits. The husband’s assets were worth approximately $1 million, including interests in various family businesses. The wife’s assets totaled approximately $35,000, most of which consisted of furs and jewelry. See Austin v. Austin, supra at 720 (listing the parties’ assets).
The agreement allowed the separate property listed on the parties’ exhibits to the agreement to be retained separately. In addition, “[t]he separate property of each party . . . , including [the] increase in value of property acquired in exchange therefor, shall remain the sole and separate property of the party in whose name it is titled.”
All other property was to be deemed marital property and subject to “division under the laws of the jurisdiction which ultimately terminates . . . the marriage.” The agreement provided, in relevant part, that any appreciation on the last marital home at the time of separation would be deemed a marital asset, subject to division. A key provision was that, if the marital residence was owned solely by the husband at the time of separation, although the wife would have to vacate the home,1 the husband was required to assist the wife in relocating and to give the wife “support based upon such considerations as the length of the marriage, their present employment, whether any children were bom to the marriage and such other factors as are cognizable under domestic relations and property laws of the jurisdiction in which the parties last resided.”2 Both parties waived alimony from the other.3
*603Over the course of their twelve-year marriage, the couple had one child, bom in 1991. By agreement, the wife stayed home as a full-time mother, helping out occasionally at the family’s restaurant, which opened in 1999, and other businesses. In addition, in 1995, the couple bought a house in East Sandwich, which was the marital home at the time the wife filed for divorce in 2001. During, the marriage, the family enjoyed “an upper class lifestyle.”
In a bifurcated trial, the judge first considered evidence whether the agreement was valid. The judge found that the parties made informed, voluntary decisions to sign the agreement, that they represented their net worth to the best of their abilities, and that the wife was “under neither duress [n]or coercion when she signed the agreement.”4He also found that the wife was fully advised of her rights when she executed the agreement and that the wife, having been divorced previously, was fully aware of her rights to alimony, support, property division, and child support. The judge found that, as it related to the division of property, the agreement was fair and reasonable at the time of execution. However, although he further found that the wife’s “waiver of alimony at that time was a knowing, voluntary and intelligent waiver,” the judge concluded that the waiver of alimony was unfair and unreasonable at the time the agreement was executed.
After a trial on the merits of the divorce, the judge divided the marital assets. Relevant to our discussion is the fact that the wife was awarded, among other things, the marital home, valued at $1,275,000,5 $525,000 in cash, and her Lexus automobile (subject to a loan balance of $24,575). The judge also awarded the wife $500 per week in child support and $1,000 per week in alimony. The husband’s appeal from the alimony provision is the sole issue before this court.6
Discussion. Antenuptial agreements that waive alimony are *604not “per se against public policy and may be specifically enforced.” Osborne v. Osborne, 384 Mass. 591, 598 (1981). However, to be enforceable, the agreement must be valid at the time of execution and must also be fair and reasonable at the time of divorce. DeMatteo v. DeMatteo, 436 Mass. 18, 26 (2002). In order to be valid at the time of execution, the judge must determine whether “(1) [the agreement] contains a fair and reasonable provision as measured at the time of its execution for the party contesting the agreement; (2) the contesting party was fully informed of the other party’s worth prior to the agreement’s execution, or had, or should have had, independent knowledge of the other party’s worth; and (3) a waiver by the contesting party is set forth.” Id., quoting Rosenberg v. Lipnick, 377 Mass. 666, 672 (1979). In determining whether an agreement was fair and reasonable at the time of execution, “reference may appropriately be made to such factors as the parties’ respective worth, . . . ages, . . . intelligence, literacy, business acumen, and prior family ties or commitments.” Rosenberg v. Lipnick, supra at 672. An agreement, even a one-sided agreement that leaves the contesting party with “considerably fewer assets” and imposes a “far different lifestyle after divorce” than she had during the marriage, is fair and reasonable unless “the contesting party is essentially stripped of substantially all marital interests.” DeMatteo v. DeMatteo, supra at 31.
Where an agreement is valid at the time of execution, a judge must take a second look at its provisions at the time of divorce. Id. at 34-35. At that time, the agreement will be enforced “unless, due to circumstances occurring during the course of the marriage, enforcement . . . would leave the contesting spouse ‘without sufficient property, maintenance, or appropriate employment to support’ herself.” Id. at 37, quoting 1 H.H. Clark, Jr., Domestic Relations in the United States § 1.9 (2d ed. 1987). We turn first to the validity of the agreement at the time it was executed.
In concluding that the agreement was not fair and reasonable as to alimony for the wife at the time of its execution, the judge *605stated: “Although at the time it may have been reasonable to for[]go alimony because she was employed and was young and healthy, ... it was not fair and reasonable at the time of execution for [the wife] to for[]go all possible alimony and support given the great disparity of earning potential of the parties.” The wife was employed at a department store in Boston, and the husband had various business interests. The judge noted that the wife entered the marriage intending to build a life with the husband and “rightfully believed that what they built together would belong to both of them,” but that the husband made “it his mission ... to prevent the creation of joint marital assets.”7 Although it is important to our analysis, the judge did not address the provision of the agreement that created support for the wife based on, among other things, length of marriage and employment, in the event a jointly owned marital home did not exist at the time a divorce complaint was filed.
The judge’s findings do not permit the conclusion that the wife was “essentially stripped of substantially all marital interests,” which is the standard required to declare an agreement invalid at its execution.8 DeMatteo v. DeMatteo, supra at 31. Disparity of income that has the potential to leave one spouse in an essentially different lifestyle is not a valid basis for determining that the agreement was invalid at its execution. Id. Moreover, “[w]here there is no evidence that either party engaged in fraud, failed to disclose assets fully and fairly, or in *606some other way took unfair advantage of the confidential and emotional relationship of the other when the agreement was executed, an agreement will be valid unless its terms essentially vitiate the very status of marriage.” Id.
Here there is no evidence of the husband’s taking unfair advantage of the wife at the time the agreement was executed. The wife’s attorney drafted the agreement, after he had advised her not to sign an agreement prepared by the husband’s attorney. Furthermore, as discussed, the judge found that the wife was fully aware of her rights and knowledgeable about alimony, property division, and child support. The agreement provided that the wife’s separate premarital property would remain hers and not be incorporated into marital assets. Cf. Rice v. Rice, 372 Mass. 398, 400 (1977) (judge has “discretion to assign to one spouse property of the other spouse whenever and however acquired”). The agreement permitted the wife a joint interest in marital assets and provided that “any appreciation on the marital home or such home as the parties reside as their last marital home at the time of separation, whether due to market forces or capital investment,” be divided as a marital asset, even if the husband held sole title to the property. Most important, the agreement entitled the wife to relocation and “support” from the husband if there were no jointly owned marital home at the time of a divorce, “based upon such considerations ... as are cognizable under domestic relations and property laws” of the relevant jurisdiction. In short, the agreement provided for either funds from a capital asset or access to support, utilizing standard factors such as those now codified in Massachusetts in G. L. c. 208, § 34. When they were married, the couple resided in the husband’s condominium unit. Therefore, it was reasonably foreseeable that a home owned by the husband would exist in the event of a divorce. There is nothing in this record that would allow us to conclude that the agreement vitiated the status of marriage by stripping the wife of “substantially all marital interests.” DeMatteo v. DeMatteo, supra at 31. Accordingly, the agreement was valid at the time it was executed. Had the wife been dissatisfied with the terms of the agreement, she could have refused marriage. See id. at 34.
Our conclusion that the agreement is valid requires us “to *607consider whether there is any reason not to enforce it.” Id. We begin by noting that, although he was not required to do so after he found the agreement to be invalid at the time of execution, the judge also found that the agreement concerning alimony was invalid at the time of divorce. He stated that the wife had spent ten of the twelve years of marriage as a homemaker, completely dependent on the husband, and given her lack of education,9 was “not in a position to secure income which would maintain the lifestyle that she achieved [for her and her daughter] during the marriage.”
In the DeMatteo case, the court held that the so-called “second look” at the agreement “is to ensure that the agreement has the same vitality at the time of the divorce that the parties intended at the time of its execution.” Id. at 37. The agreement must be enforced unless circumstances such as the mental or physical deterioration of the contesting party, or erosion of promised support by inflation, would lead the court to conclude that the agreement was not conscionable and that its “enforcement . . . would leave the contesting spouse ‘without sufficient property, maintenance, or appropriate employment to support herself.’ ” Id., quoting 1 H.H. Clark, Jr., Domestic Relations in the United States § 1.9 (2d ed. 1987). In the DeMatteo case, the court rejected as insufficient the factors the judge had relied on to determine that an antenuptial agreement with “less than modest” financial provisions for the wife was invalid: lifestyle during the marriage, vast disparity in the parties’ ability to acquire assets, and the fact that it was a ten-year marriage that produced two children. Id. at 38. The court stated that “the wife was fully apprised of the husband’s holdings before she agreed to these ‘less than modest’ arrangements.” Id. In fact, the court recognized that one spouse’s share of the marital assets might be “disproportionately small.”10 Id. at 37.
Here, there has been no physical or mental deterioration of *608the wife. She was self-supporting during a period of separation prior to their marriage. The wife has the marital home worth $1,275,000 and was awarded $525,000 in cash. She was allowed to keep many of the contents of the marital home, including jewelry acquired since the marriage worth $74,000. Given the assets she has been awarded, we cannot say that the agreement leaves the wife without sufficient property and maintenance.
Conclusion. For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the agreement is enforceable and vacate the judge’s order to award the wife alimony.
So ordered.