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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not want to sell the family home

256 replies

Schleich · 20/07/2020 08:06

StbxDH and I have decided to separate. We have 4 kids still living at home. We are mid forties. He is full time and major breadwinner, I’m part time, much lower earner.

Our only assets are the family home (equity is about 25% of the house value for our 5 bed home) and quite a lot of pensions. No savings at all.

He wants kids 50:50, which I’m upset about but can’t really argue with - he’s a really good Dad and has a very flexible job, he spends loads of time with them now. He’s not doing it for the money - we’ve gone on the child maintenance calculator and he is offering to pay me 20% more than the amount he would pay if he was only having them one day per week. He’s offered to get it put into writing.

However, because we have no savings he is insisting we sell the family home to release equity, split the equity equally and buy a smaller home in a worse area each with the deposit plus mortgage. He says without doing this he will either have to rent (which he HATES - he bought a house as soon as he got his first proper job because he hates the idea of renting so much!), or buy a bedsit or small flat, which would be too small to have the kids stay. He says to get a rental big enough to house all the kids comfortably would be unaffordable (I’ve checked, and he’s right), or at the least would prevent him ever being able to get back on the property ladder. He also has a dog, which he loves, and most rentals don’t allow pets.

He knows that a court would likely give me more than 50% of the assets, and says that he is happy to give me whatever proportion of the pensions a mediator considers necessary to make it a fair settlement.

I really don’t want to move. On my relatively low salary I’ll be limited in how much of a house I can buy with half the equity (although he says I should be able to get a mortgage which takes maintenance into account). It’s likely the children will have to share bedrooms for the first time in their lives, and their ages/genders make this a bit difficult.

We did talk to the mortgage adviser and she said that that buying him out would be very difficult due to my earnings and the high price of the house, and would incur mortgage penalties which would wipe out 20% of the equity to switch to a mortgage company which might allow it (ours won’t take into account maintenance payments). He might be able to buy me out based on his income, but not if he is paying me maintenance - because I’d need the maintenance agreed in writing for my mortgage company to take into account but that would then impact on his borrowing ability!!

I suppose I just don’t want the children to suffer as a result of our decision to split up, and all I can see is them having to switch back and forth between two homes which are much to small for our big family.

OP posts:
Alsohuman · 20/07/2020 14:26

Yes, not being in love with someone, or loving them, or being fulfilled in your relationship and having the only thing you like about them is that they're a good parent is ABSOLUTELY a good reason to end a relationship

I might have some time for this view if OP hadn’t said

To be honest I think the problem is I married him precisely because I felt he would be a perfect father and having kids was very important to me.

If being in love (whatever that is) wasn’t important 25 years ago, why is it now? There was enough there to conceive four kids who are now having their lives disrupted, when they appear to be the reason their parents married in the first place.

Ballybeyondthepail · 20/07/2020 14:31

Clearly I’ve missed the part of OPs post where she asked IF she should divorce the DH then...

ED47 · 20/07/2020 15:05

Nesting worked well for us for a few years. It became less pleasant when we both started seeing someone seriously (it was fine when just "dating"). It did give us chance to sort finances a bit and get the children used to us being separated before then having to deal with moving into a (smaller) house. And my mortgage company did take into account child support btw

Popjam · 20/07/2020 16:21

I don't think your stbxh isn't unreasonable in not wanting to rent.

What are the 16 years old's plans, will they be moving out to go to uni in a couple of years?

Or like you kind of mention, one child stays with you more, so has their 'main' room at your house and a spare bed at dfs, and another child mostly with their df but a spare bed with you. So they may have to share a room but only a night or 2 a week. 2 x 3 or 4 bed houses might work then.

It does seem a bit unsettling for the dc though. Nesting might be best for them. Affording 2 x 5 bedroom houses on 2 incomes is quite an ask.

This will be relatively temporary though, in 8 years your youngest will be 18 and oldest will be 24..probably long gone from home! Can you rent for the next few years amd then buy something smaller?

whereorwhere · 20/07/2020 17:45

Why doesn't he buy you out of the family home and you use the money to get a smaller house - your kids can then stay in the home half the time as you want and when they are with you they are in a different home with a more affordable mortgage in your salary

Ballybeyondthepail · 21/07/2020 08:44

OP, come back and let us know how it goes.

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