Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We gladly and willingly keep our finances separate. DH makes much, much more than I do. I pay for our child's school tuition and after school activities plus any credit card bills. DH helps me pay for summer camps and some of our child's clothes. The mortgage, taxes and utilities are all paid by DH. We share food costs, he pays for Costco trips and I pay for local grocery store runs. We have never fought over money. We don't hide purchases of 'things and stuff' from each other out of courtesy and respect. This works for us, it may not work for others.
If you have separate accounts, do you have access to each other's accounts? How would you know? Curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I make way more than dh. He makes about $100k and I am currently making over $3.5M. We have separate accounts but I we have always viewed everything as ours. We have a joint account where investment income is deposited with $100k or so in it. Dh has the password if he wanted to take from it. We have other joint accounts but they are really brokerage accounts for growth. He has enough in his checking account to make him feel Comfortable ($50K) but I randomly transfer money into his account.
We own our primary and secondary residences together and some early rental properties but eventually it became easier to just own them myself. A few years ago I started just acquiring assets in his name and transferred some free and clear properties to him. He is not personally liable on any debt except one very old rental condo.
I pay almost all expenses but he pays kid expenses and groceries and random target trips. I do have an auto transfer set up from his account to a brokerage account and he would say that I force him to max out his 403b and deferred comp plan. But I also give him some net rental checks (they come in both of our names)
What kind of lucky bum is this guy
Anonymous wrote:I do not understand the point of keeping things so separate. Legally, if you are married and living together, it all belongs to both of you. With that said, my husband, who doesn't work and contributes to about 25% of our expenses, also received his many millions of dollars trust fund 15 years ago and is sure not to "comingle." After 25 years of marriage, I find that hurtful, mean, and just demented. When I leave in a few years, I will figure out how to get back all the expenses I covered for 20 years, while he sat on his millions. Just a lesson for those of you who think you're holding on to your money. Mountains and mountains of resentment.
Anonymous wrote:I make way more than dh. He makes about $100k and I am currently making over $3.5M. We have separate accounts but I we have always viewed everything as ours. We have a joint account where investment income is deposited with $100k or so in it. Dh has the password if he wanted to take from it. We have other joint accounts but they are really brokerage accounts for growth. He has enough in his checking account to make him feel Comfortable ($50K) but I randomly transfer money into his account.
We own our primary and secondary residences together and some early rental properties but eventually it became easier to just own them myself. A few years ago I started just acquiring assets in his name and transferred some free and clear properties to him. He is not personally liable on any debt except one very old rental condo.
I pay almost all expenses but he pays kid expenses and groceries and random target trips. I do have an auto transfer set up from his account to a brokerage account and he would say that I force him to max out his 403b and deferred comp plan. But I also give him some net rental checks (they come in both of our names)
Anonymous wrote:We gladly and willingly keep our finances separate. DH makes much, much more than I do. I pay for our child's school tuition and after school activities plus any credit card bills. DH helps me pay for summer camps and some of our child's clothes. The mortgage, taxes and utilities are all paid by DH. We share food costs, he pays for Costco trips and I pay for local grocery store runs. We have never fought over money. We don't hide purchases of 'things and stuff' from each other out of courtesy and respect. This works for us, it may not work for others.