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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Stingy husband

87 replies

AgentDanaScully · 15/11/2023 13:31

First time posting, so please be gentle (but honest!) My husband has always been overly cautious with money. He had quite a modest upbringing (definitely no growing up with a silver spoon in his mouth or handouts from the bank of mum and dad) and everything he has, he has earned, which I respect greatly. I work almost full time and have a good salary but he still earns about 3 times more than me. We both work hard and paid off our mortgage several years ago (we've been together 18 years and bought our first house 16 years ago).
We should be able to enjoy life more, but he is obsessed by saving! He wants to retire early, as do I, but there needs to be a balance. Other than a joint account for household bills/food etc, which we both pay into proportionate to income, we have always kept separate finances (his decision). For the last 12 years, I have paid for most of our two children's clothes, uniforms, and most of their activities (until I asked him to pay for some of their clubs a few years back as I was on a lower salary back then and constantly ending the month with nothing in my account, while he had loads of disposable income available). Last month, I showed him my personal account statement to evidence how many things I buy for the children and how little I spend on myself. He was a bit sheepish and offered to pay for the cleaner (another expense I have solely paid for the last 10 years) and the cat's food! He has now finally agreed that things for the children can come out of the joint account and we both top it up 50:50 at the end of the month. I questioned as to why it took this long for him to realise that the previous system was unfair, and he didn't really have an answer.
After I had my second child (now 10), I would've loved to have had a career break to be at home with her for a year or two, knowing we had the means to do it, but there was no commitment to sharing finances from my husband...he said it would be easier to have one parent stay at home, but when I asked him how this would work in practicality, say if I needed my hair cut or new clothes, and he laughed and said "oh, I'll give you a handout". I would've been reduced to asking him for money so I ended up leaving the career I had at the time as it wasn't compatible with family life and trying to set up a business whilst juggling two young children.
I am not by any stretch of the imagination a frivolous spender...I go to the hairdresser's two/three times a year and only buy new clothes (high street) when something literally wears out! The thought of having to ask him for the basics was too humiliating...this still grates on me all these years later.
I would love for us to move house which we can easily afford, but my husband is not interested. I am always careful what I order in restaurants as I still remember an incident years ago, when he criticised me for choosing the most expensive dish on the menu (I chose it because it was what I wanted to eat!) He wants to squirrel as much money away as possible, even though I have pointed out that life is short (my Mum died at 68) and sometimes, you have to live a bit in the here and now. I feel like he has the ultimate control on the purse strings because he is the one who contributes the most money (he pretty much said this at one point) and if he doesn't think something for the family is worthy of spending on, it doesn't happen. He is squirreling away crazy amounts into his pension, which he says will support us both to retire early before my pension kicks in. I worry about what will happen 20 years down the line as to how much he will dictate what we spend it on.
I get that I am in a very fortunate situation with everything going on in the world and I apologise if my post offends anyone. However, I am starting to wonder whether my husband is using finances as a means of control. He is a wonderful person in most other ways and an amazing Dad, but this is coming between us.
Is he right to want more control over the finances as he continues the most, or am I the one being unreasonable?

OP posts:
Letsrunabath · 17/11/2023 09:34

I have a friend who was in a very similar position to you, right down to the riding lessons. She stayed for 27 years but knew retirement with him would be miserable.
They are now amicably divorced although he has fought her every way possible on the money front, she held her ground stayed pleasant had a great lawyer got half the family assets and is richer and happier than she ever was.
Don't wait as long as she did, she regrets the last 15 years with him.

SwordToFlamethrower · 17/11/2023 09:36

He didn't have an answer about the unfair system because he knew it was unfair and has been caught out.

This is financial abuse.

You have been an absolute mug OP. Read back what you've written. You've been paying for all the children's and household cleaner because that is what is called "pink expenses".

You've been taken for a mug.

Add up what YOU have spent over all the years on kids and cleaner and the cat etc, then divide it in two, then invoice him for it.

Absolutely NO WAY this should have been on your shoulders. No way!!!

Your husband is a nasty little misogynist. Get your money back, then you can treat yourself to something nice.

You deserve it!

Densol57 · 17/11/2023 11:42

Letsrunabath · 17/11/2023 09:34

I have a friend who was in a very similar position to you, right down to the riding lessons. She stayed for 27 years but knew retirement with him would be miserable.
They are now amicably divorced although he has fought her every way possible on the money front, she held her ground stayed pleasant had a great lawyer got half the family assets and is richer and happier than she ever was.
Don't wait as long as she did, she regrets the last 15 years with him.

That is not an amicable divorce !

FairyDust2010 · 02/09/2025 14:11

Hi, I know this hasn't been posted on for a while but its like I could have written the original tread and I'm wondering how it panned out in the end?

AgentDanaScully · 05/09/2025 09:14

FairyDust2010 · 02/09/2025 14:11

Hi, I know this hasn't been posted on for a while but its like I could have written the original tread and I'm wondering how it panned out in the end?

Hi, so, it was a while ago but I sat down and talked with him and had it out! He genuinely didn't seem to realise how much I was spending, and there were things he was paying for, which I wasn't aware of either! We then agreed to pay for things for the children, meals out etc from our joint account and to increase what we both pay into this account in proportion to our salaries. Meaning that we are both now left with the same amount for things for ourselves plus savings at the end of each month. Things are now so much better now everything is transparent and he has actually become quite a generous person!

OP posts:
Nearly50omg · 05/09/2025 09:34

ask your children to be very honest with you about whether they think he’s a wonderful father 🙄 then you’ll get the real truth

Nearly50omg · 05/09/2025 09:36

And what about YOUR pension? Has he put half of the money that’s in his pension into your pension to be fair? He does realise that is the legal minimum doesn’t he?

dcsp · 05/09/2025 09:48

AgentDanaScully · 16/11/2023 22:00

He doesn't really have any hobbies. He is very introverted, likes gaming, films, books, that's about it. He doesn't have friends locally (most of his friends are scattered around) and he doesn't really socialise without me.

Something of a tangent, but...:
He has an autistic daughter, he avoids social situations, ands some of what you've described sounds more like an obsession with things being "just right" than anything else (e.g. "I then noticed he was drawing the same amount out of our joint account and paying it to himself to ensure I was covering 'my' half")... I don't mean to make excuses for him, but is it possible he's autistic too?

ByQuaintAzureWasp · 05/09/2025 09:59

As you've paid for a, b, c for the last ? years and he agrees it's unfair, he needs to pay it all for the same period of time moving forward.

You should be putting £ into joint pot relative to earnings, not 50/50, sp if he earns double, you put in 34%, he puts in 66%.

You need to review your pensions also.

lanthanum · 05/09/2025 10:22

AgentDanaScully · 05/09/2025 09:14

Hi, so, it was a while ago but I sat down and talked with him and had it out! He genuinely didn't seem to realise how much I was spending, and there were things he was paying for, which I wasn't aware of either! We then agreed to pay for things for the children, meals out etc from our joint account and to increase what we both pay into this account in proportion to our salaries. Meaning that we are both now left with the same amount for things for ourselves plus savings at the end of each month. Things are now so much better now everything is transparent and he has actually become quite a generous person!

So good to hear that he was willing to change. Hopefully now you're more confident talking to him about it, you'll be able to make sure that you find a good way to manage joint finances when you get to retirement, too.

Swiftie1878 · 05/09/2025 10:30

AgentDanaScully · 05/09/2025 09:14

Hi, so, it was a while ago but I sat down and talked with him and had it out! He genuinely didn't seem to realise how much I was spending, and there were things he was paying for, which I wasn't aware of either! We then agreed to pay for things for the children, meals out etc from our joint account and to increase what we both pay into this account in proportion to our salaries. Meaning that we are both now left with the same amount for things for ourselves plus savings at the end of each month. Things are now so much better now everything is transparent and he has actually become quite a generous person!

I’m so pleased for you!
Obviously it doesn’t erase everything that happened before, but at least you are on a footing you feel you can move forward with.

AgentDanaScully · 05/09/2025 17:41

dcsp · 05/09/2025 09:48

Something of a tangent, but...:
He has an autistic daughter, he avoids social situations, ands some of what you've described sounds more like an obsession with things being "just right" than anything else (e.g. "I then noticed he was drawing the same amount out of our joint account and paying it to himself to ensure I was covering 'my' half")... I don't mean to make excuses for him, but is it possible he's autistic too?

Yes, we think he is autistic too! He was happy to come up with a new set of 'rules' and stick to them.

OP posts:
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