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Who wears the financial pants?
Posted on 9/16/22 at 9:27 am
Posted on 9/16/22 at 9:27 am
Who takes primary responsibility for the finances in your household? You or your spouse? How does it work?
Being a financial planner, I see the full gambit. Since this is the MTB, I would assume most of you are primarily responsible for tracking and monitoring all things financial in your household - but that may not be true. I'm fascinated by the relational dynamics that I witness come into play here.
I am primarily responsible for most of the finances, but since my wife [no pics] does nearly all the grocery shopping and kids' shopping, she's responsible for knowing how much to budget for those things. Everything else like bills, savings, taxes, etc. are handled by me. We intentionally take an equal amount of responsibility in deciding and acting on giving goals and desires.
Being a financial planner, I see the full gambit. Since this is the MTB, I would assume most of you are primarily responsible for tracking and monitoring all things financial in your household - but that may not be true. I'm fascinated by the relational dynamics that I witness come into play here.
I am primarily responsible for most of the finances, but since my wife [no pics] does nearly all the grocery shopping and kids' shopping, she's responsible for knowing how much to budget for those things. Everything else like bills, savings, taxes, etc. are handled by me. We intentionally take an equal amount of responsibility in deciding and acting on giving goals and desires.
Posted on 9/16/22 at 9:32 am to Niner
Exactly the same here as you describe. Only difference is my wife has no clue on the budget for these things. Her only "check with me" is if she is going to spend a lot of money on something we hadn't discussed - maybe $500+ - or if her credit card is higher than normal - like $1000+.
Posted on 9/16/22 at 9:34 am to Niner
quote:
Who wears the financial pants?
Amazon
Posted on 9/16/22 at 9:37 am to boogiewoogie1978
quote:At one point this was true for us too...glad that got corrected though...
Amazon
Posted on 9/16/22 at 10:03 am to Niner
I keep track of all the finances and make sure the bills are paid but my wife would do most of the grocery shopping, making sure the kids are clothed, etc.
We don't really "budget" but we know what is reasonable to spend without discussing it with each other. Usually if it's a $300-$400 purchase, we'll talk about it. We've gotten much looser with our money since our house has been paid off but I make sure we're hitting our savings goals and she trusts me to do that.
We don't really "budget" but we know what is reasonable to spend without discussing it with each other. Usually if it's a $300-$400 purchase, we'll talk about it. We've gotten much looser with our money since our house has been paid off but I make sure we're hitting our savings goals and she trusts me to do that.
Posted on 9/16/22 at 10:11 am to Niner
The wife (no pics) and I (no pics) have our own individual checking and savings accounts as well as joint checking and savings accounts.
Anything to do with the house comes from the joint accounts. While we segregate our vehicle notes (when we have them), insurance comes from joint (because both vehicles are on the same policy). We don't concern ourselves with what the other is doing with their personal accounts (we're both very fiscally responsible people).
We both keep an eye on finances, but I'm usually monitoring the accounts while she's the one to balance the books (so I'm checking things more often but in a more general manner, whereas she's looking at it less often but far more precisely when she does). I do the taxes every year. Grocery shopping is shared (her job has her out of town working 4 on / 4 off) so I buy when she's off working and she buys when she's in. We don't have kids so the only other real expense we end up with is when we end up with a new yard project which takes us to Lowes a bit more than we expected.
Anything to do with the house comes from the joint accounts. While we segregate our vehicle notes (when we have them), insurance comes from joint (because both vehicles are on the same policy). We don't concern ourselves with what the other is doing with their personal accounts (we're both very fiscally responsible people).
We both keep an eye on finances, but I'm usually monitoring the accounts while she's the one to balance the books (so I'm checking things more often but in a more general manner, whereas she's looking at it less often but far more precisely when she does). I do the taxes every year. Grocery shopping is shared (her job has her out of town working 4 on / 4 off) so I buy when she's off working and she buys when she's in. We don't have kids so the only other real expense we end up with is when we end up with a new yard project which takes us to Lowes a bit more than we expected.
This post was edited on 9/16/22 at 10:13 am
Posted on 9/16/22 at 10:30 am to Niner
Same for us. My wife (no pics) is very engaged in all financial decisions. She does most of the shopping for the household. Most of the day-to-day stuff - bills, taxes, budgets, investment decisions, etc is handled by me. With one notable exception: I am a commodities trader, and I have handed my P&L over to her to manage. This keeps her engaged and brings an additional level of accountability, there are a few other reasons but those are the primary.
It is a partnership above all.
It is a partnership above all.
Posted on 9/17/22 at 6:34 am to Niner
Daily items, wife
Savings, Investments, me
Savings, Investments, me
Posted on 9/17/22 at 7:57 am to Niner
All me. Make all the money and make all the decisions. It works for us. She didn't like manage her own. Joint checking account.
I have the business accounts and all other accounts for rentals etc.
I have the business accounts and all other accounts for rentals etc.
This post was edited on 9/18/22 at 9:44 am
Posted on 9/17/22 at 8:16 am to Niner
I own most aspects of it, which seems natural as the provider. Honestly if something bad were to happen, it would be a challenge. My wife knows there is a folder with the life insurance documents and passwords to all the finances.
We probably split grocery shopping. She does the large bulk items. I do the things that end up being daily.
My wife had our first child 2 months before her college graduation. We have a plan, but being a single income household, things don't always work to that. It's been a challenge many times, but I think we are both better for it. I'm proud of where we've been, where we are, and what the future looks like. My wife will go to work in 2 years and I imagine that boost will be much welcomed. I've said for years we will just throw her income into savings and keep living like we've been living with a little less of the stress.
We probably split grocery shopping. She does the large bulk items. I do the things that end up being daily.
My wife had our first child 2 months before her college graduation. We have a plan, but being a single income household, things don't always work to that. It's been a challenge many times, but I think we are both better for it. I'm proud of where we've been, where we are, and what the future looks like. My wife will go to work in 2 years and I imagine that boost will be much welcomed. I've said for years we will just throw her income into savings and keep living like we've been living with a little less of the stress.
Posted on 9/17/22 at 9:45 am to Niner
I’m an investment advisor and my wife is an accountant. So honestly we are both very involved together! But we are similar to y’all also, because she does a lot of the shopping and kids stuff.
Bills, savings, taxes, are really planned out probably 55% me / 45% her.
Bills, savings, taxes, are really planned out probably 55% me / 45% her.
Posted on 9/17/22 at 10:04 am to Niner
Wife handles bills and taxes. We set this system up years ago before my first of many deployments back when you couldn't expect easy access phone or internet forward.
I handle investments and long term planning.
We are both frugal and only debt is mortgage. Going without a budget works for us but that's atypical. I actually think our spending would have been less conservative and saving/investing less aggressive with a budget. Instead we have stuck to spending within reason and I've often been surprised how much accumulated in checking after a few months for me to move investments.
I handle investments and long term planning.
We are both frugal and only debt is mortgage. Going without a budget works for us but that's atypical. I actually think our spending would have been less conservative and saving/investing less aggressive with a budget. Instead we have stuck to spending within reason and I've often been surprised how much accumulated in checking after a few months for me to move investments.
Posted on 9/17/22 at 12:32 pm to TorchtheFlyingTiger
I handle all finances from spending and paying bills standpoint.
I was always the one heavily into finances and investing, but not trading. Around middle of COVID, my wife left her job and got interested in trading.
She has acquired way more trading knowledge then I have so now she has an account that she trades options out of and does really well.
I was always the one heavily into finances and investing, but not trading. Around middle of COVID, my wife left her job and got interested in trading.
She has acquired way more trading knowledge then I have so now she has an account that she trades options out of and does really well.
Posted on 9/17/22 at 12:47 pm to Niner
We have a checking account for all the monthly bills. Every bill that can be automated is automated. I make sure everything else gets paid.
Separate Home/Car/Vacay fund in a high yield savings account. Money goes there each month as part of the budget.
Separate emergency fund ina high yield savings account. Money goes there each month as part of the budget.
We each have an Amex Bluebird card. That is for our individual "fun money"
We use Mint to track our budget. Either of us can buy anything within our budget with no questions asked.
Anything outside of the budget we discuss.
It works for us.
Separate Home/Car/Vacay fund in a high yield savings account. Money goes there each month as part of the budget.
Separate emergency fund ina high yield savings account. Money goes there each month as part of the budget.
We each have an Amex Bluebird card. That is for our individual "fun money"
We use Mint to track our budget. Either of us can buy anything within our budget with no questions asked.
Anything outside of the budget we discuss.
It works for us.
This post was edited on 9/17/22 at 12:48 pm
Posted on 9/17/22 at 5:47 pm to SG_Geaux
I manage the finances and my wife is good at being spending conscious. We “budget” but really more of expense tracking than a requirement for cash flow management. Our “rule” is $500+ we discuss the purchase.
I manage all investments and I make sure to bring her along for how we are doing with the overall strategy we are deploying. We are aligned to the process which is the most important thing. Even through a down market, she hasn’t questioned the approach. She is conservative so the only sticking point is how much cash she would prefer us holding versus my preference. Her conservative bias has actually hedged us more through the downturn than we would have been otherwise.
I manage all investments and I make sure to bring her along for how we are doing with the overall strategy we are deploying. We are aligned to the process which is the most important thing. Even through a down market, she hasn’t questioned the approach. She is conservative so the only sticking point is how much cash she would prefer us holding versus my preference. Her conservative bias has actually hedged us more through the downturn than we would have been otherwise.
This post was edited on 9/17/22 at 5:49 pm
Posted on 9/17/22 at 6:09 pm to Niner
100% of spend comes from me outside of my wife's personal monthly budget.
I don't care what goes on in that monthly budget, as long as it stays under her cap.
I don't care what goes on in that monthly budget, as long as it stays under her cap.
Posted on 9/18/22 at 8:12 am to boogiewoogie1978
quote:
Amazon
I cancel every month saying i dont need this only to restart again a week later after expired
Posted on 9/19/22 at 12:26 pm to Niner
I do whatever I want to do.
But first, the wife tells me what I want to do.
But first, the wife tells me what I want to do.
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