Anonymous wrote:Husband wants a financial divorce but to remain a co-habiting couple and raising our kid together.
Anonymous wrote:We do separate finances and have never had an argument about money! Although we do separate finances we have a joint account for household bills + household project fund. We each contribute our determined share. We have a joint investment account where we both contribute our determined share. And we have a joint savings and travel account. For this, we determine our total savings goal for the new year by December 15th. For this account we contribute equal shares. If we get work bonuses, 20% goes into this savings regardless of the amount. Last year, my bonus was $17.5k and my wife got a $26k bonus. This all works really well for us. Together, these joint accounts equates to 43-48% of our annual salary. The rest we get to keep and do whatever without questions.
We are in our late 30s. Our 401ks are already over $700k each. Our joint savings crossed 250k last year and our joint investment account is slightly over $300k. Perhaps we could be doing better, but we love our lifestyle and it’s nice to not fight over money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely not except if he has good reason to be concerned with your spending. That's not a marriage. That's not a marriage.
My spending isn’t crazy although I’ve incurred some late penalties on taxes before. I do have goals that I’d need his income to achieve in terms of house, college funds, private school, vacations (I work FT and make about 25% of HHI). He is not into funding my dreams.
It sounds like you want to live way above your means but some tax penalties are serious. It sounds like he has good reason to keep things separate as if you file late it could impact him.
This is well within our combined means. Combined HHI is $700K annually.
Anonymous wrote:Separate finances are the only way I would marry or stay married.
If your husband makes much more than he used to, maybe he would do a post-nup instead of separate finances. He should have gotten a pre-nup though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are better off divorcing and getting childsupport and alimony.
I am so, so, so sorry that you had a kid with this POS.
She demands that he finances her "dreams" and he is the POS? I would be pissed off too if someone had dreams for my money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely not except if he has good reason to be concerned with your spending. That's not a marriage. That's not a marriage.
My spending isn’t crazy although I’ve incurred some late penalties on taxes before. I do have goals that I’d need his income to achieve in terms of house, college funds, private school, vacations (I work FT and make about 25% of HHI). He is not into funding my dreams.
It sounds like you want to live way above your means but some tax penalties are serious. It sounds like he has good reason to keep things separate as if you file late it could impact him.
This is well within our combined means. Combined HHI is $700K annually.
So you make at least 150K, and you are putting up with this nonsense.
Grow a backbone.