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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Unexpected inheritance..do I tell my partner?

356 replies

jellytiptop · 30/03/2025 11:42

Hello, I’ve been on mn for years but have name changed for this post. I have recently discovered that my grandmother has left me some money in her will, all her grandchildren received £60000 and this was distributed to us this week. I haven’t told my partner of 8 years.

For context, we own a house together as tenants in common with both of us putting down equal deposits and splitting the mortgage and bills 50/50. DP is 37 and earns £65k pa, he has two teen children from his previous marriage who we have EOW and half the holidays, he pays maintenance, uniforms, allowance etc. I am 31 earning £52k pa with no children. We have a joint account where all household expenses are paid from and we both transfer the same amount each month, but get paid into our separate accounts. He has approximately £40k personal savings and also some shares/ crypto but I don’t know the value of these. I only had £20k until now as the deposit for the house are most of my savings.

Our relationship has been very difficult the past couple of years with my partners depression and impulsive behaviour making me feel that we aren’t in a stable partnership. He has always been very insistent on everything being 50/50 financially even when I was earning far less than I am now. I’ve just accepted it because I didn’t want to viewed as a freeloader and I could look after myself. Now I’m wondering if it’s really sneaky of me to not tell him I have this money. I would like to put some of it on the mortgage but then he would ask where it came from etc. Just wanting to know if it’s ok to have a secret bank account or what I should do with the money, we aren’t married.

OP posts:
Treesandsheepeverywhere · 01/04/2025 09:04

If he had an inheritance, would you be happy finding out he kept it secret.

I agree woth those saying either leave the relationship or be fully in.

If you were unsure and unhappy in the relationship without the inheritance, why would you stay now?

Familysquabbles23 · 01/04/2025 10:20

Hrft but if you need to ask, then no don't tell him .

blondiepigtails · 01/04/2025 10:58

NewsdeskJC · 30/03/2025 12:14

For the love of God
Put it into investment bases isas over the next few years.
What a fabulous gift. Tell no one. It will give you freedom and options.

Agreed. Investment ISAs

pollymere · 01/04/2025 12:09

I'd tell him I'd inherited some money and that I was putting it a savings account. I wouldn't say how much, just that I wanted to replete my savings after paying the house deposit. I have an account we call my running away money. I've been happily married for over 25 years but I still have the account!

SeriousMum80 · 01/04/2025 15:05

Even if you were married, inheritance money would not be part of the marital balance sheet (unless it is a disproportionate part of your wealth, which would change your financial conditions substantially, which is not your case). The 60k is yours for all intents and purposes and considering you are having doubts about him, keep the cash as safe and away from him as possible

LSGXX · 01/04/2025 18:21

Absolutely not!

If were you I’d put £20k in a stocks and shares ISA right now and another £20k after 6 April. Put the rest in premium bonds. This is your little nest egg.

MusicMakesItAllBetter · 01/04/2025 18:52

If you're pouring from an empty cup, you need a break away.

Maybe after the promotion win you and DP could go on a proper r&r holiday?
If money isn't an issue, there's a heap of paradise type places you could visit

Bowies · 01/04/2025 22:00

Look at savings bonds as well ISA OP. Topping up your pension also a good idea.

Leave the mortgage as is.

Counselling seems a good plan as you said to help you unpick a few things and work out want you want for the future.

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 01/04/2025 22:38

You could suggest you both put 10k into the mortgage to reduce the payments

No need to tell him about it at all.

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 01/04/2025 22:41

perfectlyimperfectt · 30/03/2025 12:14

and yet if a woman came on here having just discovered that her partner hid a substantial amount of money from her… you’d all be saying “LTB!!”

cracks me up! (Coming from a woman by the way!!)

Because it would be evidence he was planning his exit (there is a thread like this right now saying my husband inherited 100k and didn't tell me)

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 01/04/2025 22:48

Please don't stay with him just because you fell guilty about an injury he has. I stayed with a man who had an awful injury that took months to recover from and he still left me at 8m pregnant as he told me I was too emotional 🥲

JudithOx · 02/04/2025 01:02

Do NOT tell him. You're not married, you have no children, you're not sure the relationship will survive. Keep it for yourself, it will be an asset and security for your future.

Firethehorse · 02/04/2025 03:46

Your partner already has at least this cushion of cash and investments and it’s very telling you don’t actually know the value. On this basis why would you dutifully give him full disclosure?
A few key points for me here, firstly when you earned much less your partner made you pay exactly 50%.
Secondly, you were, and are, paying 50% of a much larger property than you needed and all bills also covering his children. Nothing necessarily wrong here and you sound absolutely lovely by the way, but he was very comfortable to have things this way.
Thirdly, you were so young at 22, especially having suffered from an abusive home life.
Fourthly, you believe your partner will leave everything to his girls and make no provision for you. This is really not great and makes me wonder about his view of you and your relationship.
I’ll put 5 and 6 together, he has a quite severe illness where sometimes he ‘rots in bed’ and has at best reached a career ceiling whilst you are still working very hard to gain promotions.
You don’t sound happy OP, you actually come across as enjoying your relationship with his girls more than with him.
I don’t think you should go to relationship counselling with him as others have suggested, I think you need to get counselling for yourself.
You do not have to be the emotional and financial crutch for this family of ex wife, partner and kids.
It sounds a bit like you know you should move on but are justifiably scared.

Nikki75 · 02/04/2025 08:59

jellytiptop · 01/04/2025 01:46

I think this unexpected windfall has just made me think more deeply about the direction my relationship and life is headed. I’ve been in the trenches of dealing my dps ongoing physical and mental health struggles, my grandmother’s decline after her stroke and then death and also working extra hours to gain a promotion. I feel like I’m pouring from an empty cup and this money which should have been a blessing has actually made me really sad as I don’t feel that I can share it and use as you would in a ‘normal’ relationship. I don’t actually want to lie about it or be selfish I just want to feel safe and stable enough in my relationship. I do feel like I am betraying him as I have seen him at his absolute rock bottom and how far he has come in the last few years, still working full time etc. Maybe counselling should be my first step

I would definitely keep this for your future just in case I think all women need security too.
It's not selfish it's savvy x

Missj25 · 02/04/2025 09:04

Starlight7080 · 30/03/2025 11:48

I wouldn't tell my partner of 20 plus years 🤣 and we are very happy with kids.
But he has a tendency to spend and not save at all! . So i would keep it for emergencys or the future and not tell him.
Obviously if he needed something or we wanted to go somewhere or fix something I would use it .

Exactly this 😊

Chaseandstatus · 02/04/2025 09:08

Gelatibon · 30/03/2025 11:50

In you're circumstances I wouldn't tell him, but I also wouldn't stay with a partner I didn't want to share that news with.

Edited

This!

ladeedar · 02/04/2025 09:12

FiveShelties · 30/03/2025 11:54

I would not share my life with someone I did not trust to share an inheritance with.

In a nutshell, this.

This thread is so sad.

AcrossthePond55 · 02/04/2025 15:54

@jellytiptop

I disagree with telling him you've come into 'some money'. IMHO that's only going to result in him 'hounding' you to know how much. Because I think that's what I would do if my DH was so vague. But (obvs) DH and I are married so it's a bit different.

You aren't married and that does make a difference. Add to that the fact that you feel your relationship is on shaky ground. You need to look to your own future right now. Sock the money away and say nothing. You can always change your mind later, after some time has passed and IF your relationship gets to solid ground.

You may call that 'dishonest'. I call it being honest with yourself about the state of your relationship and what the future may bring.

JackdawMenagarie · 02/04/2025 16:06

You can put up to a maximum of 20k into a tax free ISA per year in your name

You can put up to a maximum of 50k into Premium Bonds & all prizes are tax free

You could put some into your work pension & get tax relief

All in your name

Poopants1000 · 03/04/2025 12:17

If he has always operated with a what's his is his and yours is yours mentally what have you got to gain by telling him?
You are much more likely to lose out by shouting about this and I wouldn't for a moment plummet this money into a mortgage when you both function 50/50 anyway. Don't set yourself up to lose.

AnnoyedAsAllHeck · 04/04/2025 15:43

Your DP already has 40K in savings and money in investments/crypto/etc. So, your 60K puts you a lot more on an even level.
I would not tell him at all and sock the money away. If he was your DH and you had children together, I admit I would feel differently.
Your relationship is not the most stable, so I think you need to have a stash to protect you in case things go south.

ITryHarder · 05/04/2025 15:21

I would have dumped him when he first insisted on a 50/50 split, not only because you made far less money but because his kids add to expenses. Love is truly blind... but, what's done is done. Hide the money.

Jaggar · 05/04/2025 17:07

I’m confused as to why anyone would purchase a home with a man that won’t commit to you and expects you to pay half the bills. DO NOT tell him about the money or share it. He hasn’t married you yet and probably won’t. I’d leave him, get your equity out of the house, and move on.

StraferHighwind · 05/04/2025 19:13

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MumOnBus · 06/04/2025 12:59

Put it on your pension.
That way it's safe even from you to have a change of heart and decide something tgat woukd hurt you financially.