Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keeping it separate will be helpful for when you ultimately divorce. Not sure if that benefit has been floated yet.
It is assumed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can join accounts and never question it, talk about "our money" instead of "I will buy this for myself with my money" your marriage will succeed.
If you end up arguing and discussing bout her money/his money I guarantee you...it won't end well.
Only couples who have joint finances without even ever thinking about it twice really trust each other and have truly become one.
Okay, now I'm finally seeing the whacko conservative scary church influence in all of this.
Where the throwback pastor does a great job of convincing the women that their husbands need to know about everything they spend, in order to "become one."
It also explains why the joint finances types are so freaking judgmental.
Anonymous wrote:Merging money is the easy part, merging debt can cause major issues.
Anonymous wrote:We have joint CC. Once you are married, your credit becomes tied together, so joint CC doesn't matter.
This is NOT true! Ugh, the misinformation on here sometimes...
Anonymous wrote:Keeping it separate will be helpful for when you ultimately divorce. Not sure if that benefit has been floated yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can join accounts and never question it, talk about "our money" instead of "I will buy this for myself with my money" your marriage will succeed.
If you end up arguing and discussing bout her money/his money I guarantee you...it won't end well.
Only couples who have joint finances without even ever thinking about it twice really trust each other and have truly become one.
Okay, now I'm finally seeing the whacko conservative scary church influence in all of this.
Where the throwback pastor does a great job of convincing the women that their husbands need to know about everything they spend, in order to "become one."
It also explains why the joint finances types are so freaking judgmental.
Anonymous wrote:If you can join accounts and never question it, talk about "our money" instead of "I will buy this for myself with my money" your marriage will succeed.
If you end up arguing and discussing bout her money/his money I guarantee you...it won't end well.
Only couples who have joint finances without even ever thinking about it twice really trust each other and have truly become one.
We have joint CC. Once you are married, your credit becomes tied together, so joint CC doesn't matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cannot imagine not having 100% joint finances with my husbands. Bills come out of joint account. Paychecks going into joint checking/savings. We need something, we buy it. If its super expensive, we discuss it.
Why make it complicated? I don't think I could be married to a man to didn't trust me to be financially responsible, or if I couldn't trust him to be.
Why are you drawing the conclusion that separate bank accounts (left over from our separate, pre-marriage lives) = lack of trust? You trust each other or you don't. My husband and I have talked extensively about our financial philosophies; we are on the same page, we just haven't needed to merge things until now.
We all come into marriage with existing accounts, I think. We're not child brides.
I link it to trust, because non-joint finance couples -- like 15:33 -- always say (or suggest) that they keep their finances separate so they can spend "their own money" any way they like. As if joint accounts means you now have to get permission every time you want to buy lunch or a new blouse or whatever. Or they want to keep the cost of certain items a secret from their spouse.
To me, the only explanation for having separate accounts is to "protect what's mine" -- which suggests you don't trust your partner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the people that do joint finances seem very judgmental...
Right?? To me it's semantics. You can still call it "our money" even when it's in individual accounts. It's odd to imply someone's marriage has less trust simply because of how they choose to manage their money.