Navigation

Welcome Guest
( Log In | Register )


> MyMoney

Try our new Finance Calculators:
http://compare.essentialbaby.com.au/life-s...wing-calculator

8 Pages V   1 2 3 > »   
Reply to this topicStart new topic

> Big Difference in Incomes / Paying for ... stuff

V
Bedge
post 05/01/2013, 04:08 PM
Post #1
***   Posts: 591   Joined: 16-January 10     
Regular Member
Hi All,

Here's the story ....

I pay my phone bill, business expenses, do food shopping each week, pay rego & insurance, pay for most incidentals (stuff for our dog, medicines, gifts for family/friends ...) .. I can basically ‘pay’ for myself plus some extras. DH pays my car repayment and our family private health insurance.

Apart from that, he pays for the rest of the bills and rent. He also sometimes helps me out with big bills, like car repairs and such.

Of course I appreciate all of this, he works very hard and we live in a nice home and have nice things.

Although ... there is often an undertone ... and I am reminded, often ... that I should be paying for these things and contributing more .... and that “other couples ........” Which is fine ... once upon a time I could and did. Although circumstances have changed and I do the very best I can. On the other hand, I do the majority of the house work and cooking.

I was just wanting understand how it works in other people homes, when one earns much more than the other?

Added Info:

So .. don't know if I explained this part ...

I have my own small business ... so I have my business account where all my business income and expenses come in and out from. I have had my own biz since we met. As I claim my phone, car and everything on tax, it all just comes and goes from my biz account.

And we haven't really evolved since then!

I don't really draw a wage from my income ... as some weeks are good weeks and some are quite weeks ... so I just live from my business account ..

We have talked about when I become a SATM, and things will be different then which he knows.

It just seems ... now .. frustration that I'm not earning 'more' when I should be ... and semi joking comments about his money and that I should be paying this and that ...

I feel a bit .... frustrated .. for quite a few reasons you have all mentioned.

This post has been edited by Bedge: 05/01/2013, 05:26 PM
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
Stellajoy
post 05/01/2013, 04:14 PM
Post #2
****   Posts: 2,273   Joined: 20-June 11     
Advanced Member
We have quite a massive difference in incomes but it all goes into one bank account and is "our" money. All of our expenses are joint expenses, except maybe clothes which I spend more on. I do t think either of us have laid personal claim to money coming in since a year after we started dating.

Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
barrington
post 05/01/2013, 04:15 PM
Post #3
****   Posts: 2,849   Joined: 6-August 09     
Advanced Member
Any money either of us earns goes into a joint bank account and all bills are paid from that account. There is absolutely no separation of different bills paid by different members of the family.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
GoodGollyMolly
post 05/01/2013, 04:16 PM
Post #4
***   Posts: 893   Joined: 29-August 10     
Regular Member
We pool our income do its "ours" not one persons or the others. This has worked for lots of stages of our relationship from me being a student and earning half what DH earns, to us earning about the same, to me earning twice as much.

We still have (an equal amount) of money that's put into our personal accounts every fortnight for each of us to spend how we please, but all the rest of the income goes into our joint mortgage offset account. We both agree that's our top priority for our income at the moment.

Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
Julie3Girls
post 05/01/2013, 04:19 PM
Post #5
******   Posts: 13,090   Joined: 9-May 03   From: Newcastle, NSW, Australia  
Julie
Both our incomes go into the savings offset account. Everything comes out of that.

There is NO my money or his money. There is NO "I pay for this, you for that"

We've done since the moment we got married. So at first, we were probably on equal incomes. Now, due to me changing to part time, I earn only a fraction of what he does. Thankfully, my husband appreciates that I bring a lot more to our family that just a financial amount, and it's never been an issue.

I could not live with what you are describiing.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
Eight.years
post 05/01/2013, 04:19 PM
Post #6
*****   Posts: 6,480   Joined: 10-September 04     
+
We have family money rather than his money and my money. We discuss big purchases, (of stuff for just one of us or household stuff), before we go ahead with them.


Do sort this out before you have children so that expectations are very clear. It'd be awful to discover later, for example, that childcare is 'your' expense and suddenly your contribution to the household funds will be considered even lower than it is now.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
JECJEC
post 05/01/2013, 04:22 PM
Post #7
****   Posts: 1,295   Joined: 16-April 10     
Advanced Member
That would be a red flag for me. I have earned and brought more into my relationship financially BUT we are building OUR future together.

Other people do it and I have seen one member of a family struggle whilst the other buys a boat, cigarettes and in the other example motorbikes.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
CoconutBaby
post 05/01/2013, 04:26 PM
Post #8
*   Posts: 44   Joined: 2-April 12     
New Member
Money in this house is our money. Has been this way since we purchased our house and combined our bank accounts. However, even prior to that we still never considered it as a "yours" or "mine" thing, despite having different accounts. We each worked, sure the pay was uneven, but we both contributed and generally whoever had their card out first would pay.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
michellew68
post 05/01/2013, 04:27 PM
Post #9
***   Posts: 517   Joined: 12-October 09     
michellew68
I dont know why you would consider having a child in this relationship. You are making a family and home together.
I earn nothing as I am a SAHM. My DH supports me, our child, and my two sons!!

I would think VERY carefully about a future with someone like that.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
AllegraM
post 05/01/2013, 04:29 PM
Post #10
***   Posts: 704   Joined: 4-May 12     
Regular Member
I am a SAHM now but until then, we both worked fulltime and DH earned 8-10 times my wage.

From my wage and rental income I paid the mortgage and rates on my own pre-marriage rental property and paid the rego, service and running costs of my own car and paid my own phone bill. Everything else was pooled with DH and it has always been our money, without caveat.

DH would have been happy to assist or pay all of my bills but it was a matter of pride that I continue to pay them myself as I did as a single woman. Furthermore, despite having a wonderful marriage to DH, I think it is important to protect your assets and show that they were maintained independently by yourself in the event of a relationship breakdown. I paid off my own mortgage prior to becoming a SAHM and the repairs and rates on my own property continue to be paid from my rental income.

Otherwise, what is his is mine. I am pretty tight with money though, so DH has never been in a situation where he has to go all caveman on me and tell me to reign it in.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post

8 Pages V   1 2 3 > » 
Reply to this topicStart new topic
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:

 

 
 
Advertisement
 
 
Advertisement
 
 
 
Featured Promotions
 
 
Advertisement
 
 
RSS Lo-Fi Version
Skin by IPB Customize
Time is now: 20/06/2013

 
Essential Baby and Essential Kids is the place to find parenting information and parenting support relating to conception, pregnancy, birth, babies, toddlers, kids, maternity, family budgeting, family travel, nutrition and wellbeing, family entertainment, kids entertainment, tips for the family home, child-friendly recipes and parenting. Try our pregnancy due date calculator to determine your due date, or our ovulation calculator to predict ovulation and your fertile period. Our pregnancy week by week guide shows your baby's stages of development. Access our very active mum's discussion groups in the Essential Baby forums or the Essential Kids forums to talk to mums about conception, pregnancy, birth, babies, toddlers, kids and parenting lifestyle. Essential Baby also offers a baby names database of more than 22,000 baby names, popular baby names, boys' names, girls' names and baby names advice in our baby names forum. Essential Kids features a range of free printable worksheets for kids from preschool years through to primary school years. For the latest baby clothes, maternity clothes, maternity accessories, toddler products, kids toys and kids clothing, breastfeeding and other parenting resources, check out Essential Baby and Essential Kids.