Bank accounts...what works best for you and your partner? I'm on the fence - been on my own since I was 19 (now 37), and never had to share. I've heard both ways on bank accounts, that separate keeps people sane, but then there are those who say that's not trusting. I think we will share accounts after we get married, but I don't know for sure yet.
Re: Separate or Joint?
@emmyg65 I love your plan. Good job!
Our system works as it is now so we probably will not change it once we get married. I am the financial guru and he is not as good with money. So we have our own accounts. He gives me "rent" which is 50% of our monthly bills and then I pay all those bills. So the amount he gives me is for everything we share- mortgage, cable, electric, trash, groceries (rounded to a set amount).
We are each responsbile to pay our bills that are not joint (car, insurance, gas, cell) and we can do what we wish with the remainder in our accounts. As long as the bills are paid, the rest is our own but we mostly try to save and consult each other on any purchase over $100.
When we book a vacation or something, I book it and he pays me 50%. Neither of us make enough to be the sugar daddy and pay 100% and even if one of us did we like feeling like an equal team.
Now that he has a new job, we are shortly going to add an account for him, so we will have personal checking for him, joint checking account, personal checking for me, and then turn my savings into joint savings. I asked him why he wanted that and he said so he can buy me things without me seeing the charge on the bank statement. I told him that while that was a very sweet answer, I knew it was really so I wouldn't see how much he spends at the comic book store
There is a large discrepancy in our incomes (as in DH makes 2-3x more than I do), so we have a common account. That way we have equal buying power and thus equal say in major purchases. We consult each other on any purchase over a couple hundred dollars. (We are both ridiculously frugal apart from my splurging on tuition.) Neither one of us has ever stopped the other one from making a purchase, but we still check in. Mostly, it's about timing so he doesn't pay all of our bills one day and I buy something the next day and then we're close to overdrawn.
We buy gifts for each other on our personal credit cards then pay off the balance from the joint account. For example, if I pay $800 on my cc this month, he doesn't know exactly how much of that was for a gift for him versus gas, food, etc. Honestly, though, I usually buy from his amazon wishlist, so he knows how much everything costs anyway!We do both. I earn more money than FI but have many more expenses. He's very hands-on with finances because he's spent most of his life living paycheck-to-paycheck. I'm nowhere near as skilled but have usually been lucky enough to have enough money for it not to be a problem. For now, we keep things separate because it's easier. This helps with his financial aid as he goes back to school and he's convinced that it will somehow help as his lawyers go after his ex-wife for child support.
We opened a joint account with the sole intention of using it for wedding savings/spending. So far, we're really just using it for savings and joint expenses.
We both suspect that we'll change the balance of money between accounts over time but it works well for now.