Anonymous wrote:OP, the only way I can see this working is if you and your DH pay household expenses commensurate with your income. So if you are bringing in 40% of the total household income, you pay 40% of the expenses (picking and choosing whichever ones add to that). It sounds like you may have been following this formula until you reduced your salary and your DH is now refusing to make the necessary adjustment. If you're bringing in 25% of the total household income but still paying (hypothetically) 40% of expenses, that seems patently unfair to me. It means you are penny-pinching, or even going into debt, while he has plenty of disposable income to spend as he chooses.
I don't necessarily think there's anything inherently wrong with separate finances, as long as both parties play fair. Your DH is not playing fair. Has he explained why is he refusing to shift the burden of spending off of you now that you are bringing in less money? To me that is the key question.
Anonymous wrote:First, i dont know why people with all joint accounts are responding to this thread.
Second, OP who is contributing to savings? Is your issue that you are saving less in your name than he is?
DH and i have separate checking accounts but a joint savings account. DH pays the mortgage, insurance, and puts money every month into savings. I pay tuition/ daycare, utilities, and most kid expenses. We split groceries, gas, and restaurants. We alternate large purchases depending on cash flow. Even though we have separate checking accounts, having the joint savings helps us feel that our money is truly combined.
Anonymous wrote:We never got a joint checking account--and we divide our expenses a lot like you do. There's really no reason, just kinda works for us. I like feeling like I have "my" money that I can spend how I wish, and vice versa (though I'd never make a huge purchase without running it by him). I also like that when I buy DH a gift, I'm not pulling from his account. But it's all semantics: I consider both accounts to be ours, and if my acct was low, he'd just write me a check. We also have a joint savings acct that we dump money into whenever. I think if you do things this way, your budget should give you both the same amount of spending money, and savings at the end of the month, if that makes sense. So sounds like DH should be willing to pay more of the bills now that your salary is lower.
Anonymous wrote:DH refuses to join our finances for reasons I don't want to discuss on a public forum. Everything is separate. I pay certain bills, he pays certain bills and this was fine with me until I "mommy tracked" which decreased my income significantly. This is our arrangement:
I pay:
Childcare
Electricity
Cable
My student loans
Baby's diapers and other odds and ends
He pays:
Mortgage (modest)
Car payment
Health insurance
Groceries
This arrangement sounds fair on paper but not when you consider that I literally earn 1/5 of what he does at this point. I asked him to contribute half towards childcare expenses but he balked at the idea. Is there a way that I can make the separate finances more fair or do I just suck this up?
If you have separate finances, what works for you?
[/bAnonymous wrote:My sister and her husband had an arrangement similar to OP--it is a significant factor in what will soon be an ugly divorce. Are you roommates or spouses/partners?
ITA. [b] I can't imagine living like that. We have one checking account and one savings account. Both of our names are on each. We don't divide up our bills and assign percentages. We are married. We are a team. There is no "his money" or "my money". It's our money.