Should Married Couples Divide Their Money?

by Jason Price · 20 comments · Print Print ·

Should Married Couples Divide Their Money?

Some couples combine their money while others divide their money.  Perhaps both couples were earning and managing money individually before they got married, so why not continue right on doing the same thing.  It’s the easy thing to do, right?  Well, of course there is always that discussion about who will pay what when the bill arrives in the mail.  And if you get a new car, who’s name goes on the car title?  Keep financial matters separate, right?  Nah, you don’ want to do that.  Dividing up your finances and claiming territory leads to communication challenges, individualism in your marriage (in a bad way) and developing the wrong perspective about money.

Communication Challenges

Oh yeah, we’ll each pay our own bills and have our own spending money.  But when big financial decisions need to be made who is going to handle what? I’m talking about that big unexpected expense or emergency that occurs.  Bill, do you have enough money in your savings to cover this one.  No, Jane, I spent every bit of it this summer on entertainment and my new super gadget.  What about you, Jane?  Well, I needed a new wardrobe for work.  I know it’s important to save, but I just needed my new clothes.  What?  You mean neither of us have an emergency savings account between the two of us?  Geez. So, you get the picture.  You want to avoid arguing about money.  If you’re not talking about your money then you’re in separate worlds and you definitely can’t hold one another accountable for wise financial decisions.

Individualism

So we all know that marriage is about becoming one, right?  You leave mom and dad, meet the love of your life and decide to tie the knot for the rest of your life.  You’re no longer dating, you’re married.  When she is upset about something, you’re upset about it too.  When you leave the house, you have to tell your honey where you’re going.  Yes, you’re one.  You’re in lock-step, well, at least you’re supposed to try to be as much as possible.  Men and women are no doubt different and that is what makes relationships so great.  But you shouldn’t manage your affairs as individuals and this certainly includes money dealings.  Come on!  Are you going to fix your own dinner each night?  Which affairs will be together and which will be separate?  Nah, just become one in your marriage and work through it all together!  It’s a lot more fun that way.

Perspective

Ah, the perspective on money management.  Common perspective says money is our money and we can do with it what we please.  But the Christian knows that’s not true.  Our money, is really the money God has entrusted to our care.  It’s all His money.  But when you’re in a relationship and you start drawing lines between his and hers; you’re already creating an atmosphere counter to Godly principles on money.  Rather, the perspective should be on God’s economy and managing together what you’ve have been blessed with in your marriage.  You know, it’s not easy keeping the right perspective on money.  Money is powerful and it takes accountability and help.  Who better than your spouse to be there for you when your selfish tendencies start to take over.

Final Thoughts

Alright, just put your money together and be done with this.  What do you have to lose?  Oh, he or she is going to go out and spend it all?  Sit down with a cup of coffee, tea, or whatever once a week have a money meeting and talk about your money.  Talk about it over a spending plan you both create together.  You’ll learn you get to experience more joy and develop a deeper bond in your marriage when you can manage your finances together.  Nothing will be more pleasing to God and your sex life will be better too.  Yeah, I said that.  Personal finance, if done right and together, can deepen your relationship on many levels.  :)

So, reader are you convinced married couples shouldn’t divide their money?

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{ 19 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Miranda

All of our money goes into one big pot. We only divide it into Savings, Retirement, Emergency, etc. ;) We’re pretty good about consulting each other on large purchases, and making most money decisions together.

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2 Tiffany

It always amazes me when I hear that couples still have seperate checking accounts. How do they divide up who pays for what? Does one person pay the mortgage while the other pays the utility bills?

There is a married couple in my family who has seperate accounts and they way that they worked it was they took the percentage that they make and they then paid that percentage of the bills. So, if their total income was $100,000 a year, and the wife made 40% of the money, then she would pay 40% of the bills every month. To me this just seems so ridiculous and as if they are not living as a true married couple.

Even though my husband has always made more money than me, it has always been what is mine is yours and what is yours is mine.

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3 kt

I think that they should have like a central bank account where the bulk of their earnings go and separate accounts where like 5% should go so that each one can have a little pocket change to use up from time to time. But total financial transparency should be paramount; not like those couples i read about having millions in investments that their partners do not know about. If this is the case, then it means that they have bigger trust issues that should be solved before they get to proportions so gargantuan that no one can solve then. BTW that is a nice image you have used for the post :)

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4 David @ The Frugality Game

I’m just got engaged (yay!) and I couldn’t imagine doing it any other way.

If marriage is just a business deal, then, sure, maybe it makes sense to hedge your bets. But if it’s a true, 100% “twain shall be one” (which I believe it is), then I, personally, think combining money is a key part of that.

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5 Theresa Higby

While I agree in principle, sometimes the best think for the marriage is a separation of finances. When one member of the couple is a spender and one is a saver the best thing may just be a separation of funds.

There are joint expenses that must be paid such as house payments, utility bills, and groceries. But when a couple agrees that they have different financial goals and practices in mind the funds beyond the basics can be what leads to strife in the marriage.

My husband and I have worked out and equitable arrangement of who pays what. He pays the house, utilities, maintenance. I pay the car insurance groceries, cell phone, etc. Beyond that we save or spend our individual money as we desire. If one of us wants a night out they agree it is their tab to pay. We each pay for our own car, for example, and therefore the car we chose must fit within our individual budget.

We are, however, not confined to our specific responsibilities. There are times when we each step out and offer to help with the others expenses, either necessary or desired.

This policy has enabled us to avoid the “where are you spending my money” arguments. At the same time we have both remained flexible and generous. I don’t know how it would work for everyone else, but it has been a marriage saver for us.

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6 Jason Price

Interesting perspective, Theresa. It sounds like you and your husband get along quite well in your situation. I’m obviously in disagreement with the approach, but appreciate your comment and respect your opinion. :) I believe money and all matters should be brought under one roof. I couldn’t imagine not sharing financial goals with my wife. I’m curious…have you ever tried to combine them together. Perhaps two is better than one and you could both work together to achieving your goals. Just curious.

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7 Sulana

Actually, my husband and I have separate accounts. He pays all of the living expenses (rent, utilities, food, taxes, etc) and my paycheck goes to paying off debt and savings. This way, we’re used to living on his income while eliminating debt. Once we have children (hopefully debt freedom comes first!), I’ll quit work and we’ll live exclusively on his income. We never argue about money and each give the other whatever is needed when asked. I realize this may not be what works for everyone, but it totally works for us ;)

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8 David/moneycrashers

If the “money talk” has been had, and both are in agreement of sorts, then go ahead and put it together. Otherwise, not in a million years. Money can tear a marriage apart (this comes from experience) and you can also lose alot of it, depending on your situation.

Sharing money gives your spouse carte blanche to go nuts with it, and by the time you put a stop to it, it could be too late.

When it comes to money, don’t let love blind you!

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9 Jason Price

David, that’s why I think a money marriage seminar or class is a great idea before heading into this big life step. Yes, money can tear a marriage apart and it’s important to get off to the right start. But..It’s never too late to start if a couple hasn’t taken a class together. I don’t think sharing gives anyone the right to go spending crazy. There is a mutual respect one has to have for the relationship as well live up to one’s responsiblities of financial stewardship. That sort of behaviour is destructive to a relationship and would probably warrant marital counseling if not resolved.

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10 brad

I agree wholeheartly that sharing as in a joint account can punish an honest spouse. I would never do that again.

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11 Cincinnati CPA

Having a joint checking account shows trust in the relationship. Each person can still maintain their own savings or credit card, but the burden of finance has too much affect on a marriage to be unequally divided.

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12 Shawn G

While my wife and I have joint accounts, I can understand why it may not work for everyone. You really have to be on the same page with your financial goals in order to have joint accounts. If the two parties are not on the same page, and don’t have the same goals then they should not join their accounts.

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13 Karla

My husband and I have two separate bank accounts and divide everything into two, like roommates do. When the bills are ready to be paid, everybill gets 50% from my account and 50% from his account. In the article it states people would argue about it, not so, the bills need to get paid and everything we own we own together, including bills. We have been together 11 years and there has never been any arguments about money and if I buy myself something or he buys himself something that is ok because it came out of our personal accounts, we of course keep in mind that at the end of the month the bills come and there is no excuse.

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14 Moneyedup

I agree with KT in that couples should have both shared and separate accounts. It is nice to be able to have some financial freedom for your partner for personal spending (for example, I wouldn’t want my significant other to know about every single time I buy a pair of shoes). On the other hand, it is quite reasonable to have a combined account to pay the bills.

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15 Wojo

I guess it works for some people, but I don’t really understand why you’d want to divide your money. It’s just so much simpler to throw it all in one pot.

On the other hand, I’m a big proponent of setting aside some cash for “personal” use so neither spouse feels like they’re somehow over-controlled by the other. It works wonders.

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16 Peter Anderson

I agree with having personal money too. We each have $50-100 in “blow money” that we can just spend on whatever we want no questions asked. It does help you to feel less like you’re being controlled or something along those lines.

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17 Financial bondage

If you don’t want to remain married for long then by all means, keep your money separate.

Once you marry it’s no longer her money or his money. It’s “our” money. Actually, it’s God’s money.. so make sure what you’re doing with the money is what God wants…

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18 sam

Some people are selfish and will only do what they want.

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19 Carie

I have found that usually the spouse who makes the least has no problem with the ‘put all the money in one pot’ approach. Tried with the first marriage; yes we communicated about the money, set guidelines and had goals. Unfortunately my ‘other half’ decided that none of what we had communicated about mattered, and what did matter was material items that he could purchase with my hard earned money. I will not make that mistake again, and would hope no one else does either. It is unfortunate, but yes there are schmucks out there looking for a free ride.
Also, it seems that when the woman in the relationship makes more money, and contributes more, it tends to be emasculating to the man, completely unintentional. My vote is for separate finances.

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