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Marriage and Money: What’s Love Got to Do With It?

Focus on the Family

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What does money have to do with love and marriage? As it turns out, quite a lot. The number one issue at the center of marital contention is not intimacy or children — it’s actually money. Financial disagreements are all too common for many married couples. Let’s dive deeper into why that is and how you can create a healthy relationship with money in your marriage.

What Does Money Have to Do With Love?​


Your decisions about money and marriage shape your entire life. Both will affect your happiness and quality of life. Sure, love makes the world go ‘round, but it doesn’t pay the bills. Likewise, an obsession over money will hurt your relationship, especially when you let it drive a wedge between you. Financial disagreements are one of the leading causes of divorce.

In a committed relationship, your financial decisions affect more than you alone. Your spouse, your children, and your future grandchildren will be affected by the way you treat money. In my 20-plus years of counseling couples about their finances, I’ve learned that money is a sensitive subject. It always brings out emotions, often buried deep inside from childhood. And unfortunately, because it’s usually not top of mind when you’re dating or on your honeymoon, couples can find themselves blindsided by the money obstacles or challenges that pop up once you’re married.

If this sounds familiar, don’t hit the panic button right away.

Money Discussions With Your Marriage Partner​


For couples preparing to get married, don’t ignore each other’s views on money. Most people’s beliefs on money began in their early childhood, so you may need to explore that to understand where you’re both coming from. Marriage is a lifelong commitment, and this shouldn’t be taken lightly. By having these conversations early, you can anticipate where you may have to compromise with your spouse on money management later on.

Even if you’re well beyond the engagement stage, these conversations are beneficial to have. Open communication about money establishes trust and transparency and gives you insight into each other’s money mindsets.

For example, here are questions you could answer for each other:

  • How do you feel when you get money?
  • What excites you about money?
  • What does your family think about money?
  • What kind of economic background did you grow up in, and how do you think that influences you today?
  • Do you have strong opinions about money and family?
  • Do you have any concerns about my approach to spending, saving, or investing?
  • Where do you think we differ the most around money?

Make these conversations an open and respectful dialogue where you both have a chance to feel understood. During these conversations, there is a certain vulnerability, so it is necessary to avoid judging each other.


Do you and your spouse view money differently?​

Join hosts Jeff and Shaunti Feldhahn for this series of six short videos (roughly 3-4 minutes each) called “Thriving in Love & Money.” They’ll offer helpful tips, informed by years of research and based on their new book, to help you and your spouse explore the underlying issues that lead to financial conflict and consider healthy ways to move from “his vs. hers” to “ours” when it comes to money.
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The Role of Financial Transparency​


Just as trust is important in every aspect of marriage, it’s equally as important to be financially transparent with your partner. Moreover, your honesty about money in a relationship is a precursor to your honesty about other things in the relationship. Oftentimes, people enter relationships with debt, savings, investments, or loans. It’s important to be transparent about all of these things, and especially important to be forthright about financial obligations that could impact their ability to borrow money, whether that be a bad credit score, a lien, or student loan debt.

Sharing information with your fiancé or spouse about your income and earnings is necessary for trust and healthy communication. Committing financial infidelity by hiding income or new debt is a recipe for marriage problems. This is why financial transparency matters. Knowing where you both stand individually will help guide what direction you need to go as a team.

Money disagreements typically come from misaligned expectations. You and your partner likely had very different upbringings, which influences the individual mindsets and habits you each have with money. As a result, you may have different expectations about how the money will be managed in your marriage than your spouse does; this is quite normal.

Navigating Money Disagreements​


As a husband of nearly 22 years and a long-time wealth manager to some of the most successful entrepreneurs in the world, the best advice I can give is this: communicate honestly and regularly. If you have open and honest communication around money management, you and your partner can share personal goals and concerns, understand each other’s financial habits, establish alignment, and agree upon a shared vision. You will support each other and complement each other’s different viewpoints. This will take out some of the guesswork for future decisions about saving, spending, investing, and borrowing. It will also prevent unnecessary arguments over money matters. In the absence of communication, there is growing speculation and mistrust, but this can be alleviated with consistent, efficient communication.

Circumstances change over time, including your income, net worth, or the size of your family. Be prepared to discuss how you want to handle money for new expenses or unpredicted circumstances that may arise. For instance, how you see money being spent on kids may be different from what your spouse expects. One parent may be inclined to spoil the kids, while the other is looking to hold back and teach more self-reliance. Alternatively, unpredictable circumstances like job loss can be a strain on finances. According to a Reader’s Digest survey, 47 percent of respondents said a layoff or job loss was a major challenge in their relationship. As these changes arise, be prepared to address them as a team rather than allowing them to drive a wedge between you.

Recognize That Things Change Over Time​


In 2008, my wife and I experienced a life-changing scenario just like this. One particular Sunday, we sat in church absorbing a sermon about finding hope in life’s difficult trials. As if on cue, an endless stream of notifications bombarded my phone as clients and colleagues relentlessly tried to reach me. The company, Merrill Lynch, was on the verge of bankruptcy, only to be saved by a backroom deal when Bank of America bought it.

This catapulted my eventual departure from the secure job I once knew, as I decided to resign and start my own company and become an entrepreneur. While my wife was endlessly supportive, the uncertainty was unnerving for her, as we had a big mortgage and a few young kids at that time. I explained how I believed we would be able to grow my new business to eventually replace and exceed my income and give us more financial security than working for the big Wall Street bank I’d been at my entire career. Having her support and confidence as I took that leap of faith was critical, and it was fostered by open communication.

Marriage and Money Matters​


Having a healthy relationship with money in your marriage is a collaborative effort. Remember that financial disagreements are a normal part of any relationship. Disagreements do not have to lead to fights or the end of the relationship. Once you and your partner create alignment and increase communication, you will likely avoid disputes and achieve your life and financial goals. Understand that your finances are not just about how much money you have but also how you manage what you do have. Considering that 1 in 3 Americans lack financial literacy, couples should consider working with an independent fiduciary coach.

With the guidance of a professional, a financial coach can help you and your partner decide what you want to accomplish and give strategic ways to reach those goals. They can also provide guidance on budgeting, investing, and other financial management skills. Working with a financial coach can help couples to avoid common financial pitfalls and build a more secure financial future together. Your decisions about money and marriage shape your entire life, and the level of effort and care you invest in this important issue will pay dividends for decades to come. No matter where you’re starting from today, you can provide a boost to your marriage and family by increasing communication and unity in your financial life.

The post Marriage and Money: What’s Love Got to Do With It? appeared first on Focus on the Family.

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It's true. It matters even more if a relationship or marriage doesn't work out.
 
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Hey there! I totally agree that money can be a major source of tension in marriages.
The challenge that I see is when both are not in agreement with how financial matters are handled or managed. My marriage is a good example of this. I am quite conservative when it comes to financial management. My wife is quite the opposite and that difference does place stress on our marriage at times.

When we met we both were previously married, were about 30 years old, and had independent lives. After we were married we chose not to open joint checking/savings accounts but instead maintained our financial independence and I think in our case it has been the best thing to do. Even though it can be stressful at time, if we had joint accounts I honestly think I would go totally bonkers.
 
Money is not the root of all evil, but the love of money that is the root of all evil.

Proverbs 21:20 There is treasure to be desired and oil in the dwelling of the wise; but a foolish man spendeth it up.

In our house my husband is not that good at managing our money as in making a budget for paying the important things that take precedence over the desires so that is my job to take care of the finances and he is happy with that as it was a mutual agreement. We learned over the years not to live above our means and spend frugally like a foolish man/woman that would spend all their money and have none for bills and groceries. We set aside first what is the Lord's as giving back to those in need. Then after paying the monthly bills I set aside what I like to call fun money as we save up for vacations twice a year. Even then we watch what we spend on trips.

It's only when a husband and wife can work together within the finances especially if one wants to buy something that the other can agree on, but only if they can afford it. Credit Cards are good for building up credit, but also be wise in how you use them in order to make your monthly payments. God wants us to be good stewards over our finances.
 
Money is not the root of all evil, but the love of money that is the root of all evil.
I don't know if this is necessarily true. Many translations render 1 Timothy 6:10 as money being the root of all kinds of evil.

For example, would it not be evil to covet something someone else has simply because they have it even if it doesn't involve money? Or what about murder? Not all murders involve money. This can be the case with most any form of evil.
 
I don't know if this is necessarily true. Many translations render 1 Timothy 6:10 as money being the root of all kinds of evil.

For example, would it not be evil to covet something someone else has simply because they have it even if it doesn't involve money? Or what about murder? Not all murders involve money. This can be the case with most any form of evil.
What it means is that with money also comes greed found in the hearts of many always lusting for more money, more power that only leads to their destruction, especially in marriages.
 
After we were married we chose not to open joint checking/savings accounts but instead maintained our financial independence and I think in our case it has been the best thing to do.

That's what we do. I help her out if she needs it, and we go in together when a big expenditure needs to be made. But she has her money, I have mine, and we both have the freedom to do as we please.

I can't see myself making decisions for her, or her having to ask me for everything. That's way too demeaning in my book. If we did it any other way, I'd simply give her an allowance of what I make, and whatever she did with it would be her business. The whole concept of treating a woman like property makes me utterly nauseous.
 
That's what we do. I help her out if she needs it, and we go in together when a big expenditure needs to be made. But she has her money, I have mine, and we both have the freedom to do as we please.

I can't see myself making decisions for her, or her having to ask me for everything. That's way too demeaning in my book. If we did it any other way, I'd simply give her an allowance of what I make, and whatever she did with it would be her business. The whole concept of treating a woman like property makes me utterly nauseous.
I do bring more into our family that she does but then I also pay the larger portion of the regular monthly bills. One thing I try to do is periodically, maybe once per year, compare our incomes and what expenses we take care of and then try to determine what portion of my income I should give her to balance things out. I just did this last week.
 
I do bring more into our family that she does but then I also pay the larger portion of the regular monthly bills.

I do as well.
One thing I try to do is periodically, maybe once per year, compare our incomes and what expenses we take care of and then try to determine what portion of my income I should give her to balance things out. I just did this last week.

I've never done this. Without wanting to sound critical of yours or anyone else's approach, I trust God and I trust my wife, so I keep things simple and just watch for if she is showing signs of having too little money.

If she has too much, then it's "if it ain't broke don't fix it." I simply take up her offers to treat me out to dinner a little more often, and leave it at that, Lol.
 
What his is mine and what mine is his as we are one and all financial decisions are made together. Neither one of us deny what each of us want to purchase as long as it fits in the budget and we can afford it. One thing my husband does before buying anything of a large amount is that he always ask me if we can afford. Very seldom do I ever say no to him and if I do he understands the reason why. Me, I'm very frugal and I hate shopping. (Yes, you heard a woman saying she hates shopping :lol)
 
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What his is mine and what mine is his as we are one and all financial decisions are made together. Neither one of us deny what each of us want to purchase as long as it fits in the budget and we can afford it. One thing my husband does before buying anything of a large amount is that he always ask me if we can afford.
This is one area where my wife and I struggle from time to time. I always involve her when I want to make a larger purchase and by larger I mean almost anything that exceeds a couple hundred dollars. She, on the other hand, has not always done this for me. Back in 1999, I suddenly found out that she decided to partner up with two other people and invest in a business. By the time I learned of it, it was already a done deal. I personally didn't think that was too fair on her part. She's also had little concern about running up credit card debt into the thousands and that too has been challenging. Three times I wiped out savings accounts and gave up on other things to help her pay off the debts only to have her do it again. The last time I refused to help and told her it was her problem.
 
This is one area where my wife and I struggle from time to time. I always involve her when I want to make a larger purchase and by larger I mean almost anything that exceeds a couple hundred dollars. She, on the other hand, has not always done this for me. Back in 1999, I suddenly found out that she decided to partner up with two other people and invest in a business. By the time I learned of it, it was already a done deal. I personally didn't think that was too fair on her part. She's also had little concern about running up credit card debt into the thousands and that too has been challenging. Three times I wiped out savings accounts and gave up on other things to help her pay off the debts only to have her do it again. The last time I refused to help and told her it was her problem.
If she falls late irc they can take any joint property
 
This is one area where my wife and I struggle from time to time. I always involve her when I want to make a larger purchase and by larger I mean almost anything that exceeds a couple hundred dollars. She, on the other hand, has not always done this for me. Back in 1999, I suddenly found out that she decided to partner up with two other people and invest in a business. By the time I learned of it, it was already a done deal. I personally didn't think that was too fair on her part. She's also had little concern about running up credit card debt into the thousands and that too has been challenging. Three times I wiped out savings accounts and gave up on other things to help her pay off the debts only to have her do it again. The last time I refused to help and told her it was her problem.
It usually does put a strain on a marriage when one is a spend thrift running up the depletion of the finances. As long as the credit cards are in her name, then yes I agree that it is her problem as it will only cause bad credit on her part if she can't pay them.
 
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