Money is widely acknowledged as the number one cause of arguments in relationships. So it’s perhaps not surprising that a quarter of married couples and 30% of those in committed relationships keep ‘financial secrets’ from their partner, according to research from Starling Bank.
While most of us don’t have thousands stashed in secret accounts, how many of us can hand on heart say we’ve never fibbed to our partner about money?
So where do you draw the line? When is it reasonable and when is it damaging to a relationship?
What’s on this page?
There are financial secrets that are undeniably secrets: kept intentionally from the partner through lies or omissions.
Other money secrets might fall into a grey area. What one person might consider privacy is another person’s secrecy, says Vicky Reynal, financial psychotherapist and author of Money on your Mind: the Psychology behind your Financial Habits.
“I’ve seen partners keep important information about the deteriorating state of their finances - perhaps a business or investments are performing poorly – out of a desire ‘not to worry’ their partner. But what isn’t thought about is the impact of a lie, of a secret, on the relationship,’ says Reynal.
While couples quarrel about most aspects of their finances, it’s what their other half spends that causes the most friction.
How much of our spending we keep secret is often in proportion to how judged we feel, says Reynal. If we are ashamed of our own behaviour – for example, if we wish we could keep our shopping under control – we judge ourselves. But there’s also a fear of our partner’s judgement as well. We hide it rather than face the shame of disclosing it to them.
And, of course, overspending may lead to debt. One in six people has hidden debt from a partner, according to credit report company ClearScore. Financial coach Sara Maxwell, founder of Wealth Coach, says: “Where one person has built up quite a significant debt, a lot of shame can build up around that. The idea of telling that person before they put a plan in place to deal with it feels impossible.”
How do you feel about the idea of your partner having savings you know nothing about? Do you have secret savings of your own? For one in three people, these savings pots are in case something goes wrong with their relationship, according to a survey from investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown.
Having secret savings is more common in the over-55s than younger couples. This can be sensible, especially given that two in five marriages end in divorce, says Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown.
“Women are more likely than men to be saving just in case the relationship ends. It may reflect the fact that on average they’re more likely to earn less and have more caring responsibilities, which could mean more immediate financial problems in the event of a split,” she adds.
Soon after 57-year-old Sue* remarried, she received £3,000 through an inheritance. She wanted to spend the money on her own daughters and felt that if she told her new partner, he’d want to share it equally. So she kept it a secret from her partner. “It didn’t feel fair. I wasn’t prepared to have the argument, so it was easier to keep quiet and put it in a separate account,” she says.
There can be darker reasons why people want to keep money secrets. Financial abuse – trying to financially control someone in a relationship – can be an aspect of domestic abuse. If you feel that might be happening to you, the NHS website has lots of information about where to seek help for domestic abuse.
How we’ve learned to structure relationships through childhood and adult life may also be behind tendencies to financial secrecy. “For example, we might be acting out our fear of giving ‘everything’ to the other and getting ‘too close’ to them by being fully transparent because in past relationships we have felt betrayed, unexpectedly abandoned and so on,” says Reynal.
In blended families where there are children or grandchildren, there can be secrecy. Maxwell adds: “Experiences and patterns from the past, if unresolved, can show up in the new relationship. Sometimes people haven’t discussed what’s in their individual wealth picture and wills because they don’t want to have the conflict. In these cases, you can be leaving it for the people you leave behind when you pass at the hardest possible time,” she says.
If you’d like to have more openness about money in your relationship, these are some steps you can try.
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