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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To refuse 25% vs 75% split ownership of house?

313 replies

peevedpartner · 11/08/2025 13:45

In short: we have sold our house and are hoping to exchange on a new home soon. Husband wants to have the house 25% in my name while the other 75% is in his name.

I don’t know how much info or back story is.l needed to provide additional context, but I will try and summarise below:

DH and I have jointly owned our current home for 15years. We also jointly own a flat that we'd like to sell in the next couple of years. We are upsizing soon to a larger home to accommodate our family.

The new home is roughly double the size and value of our current home. We were only able to purchase the new house due to a substantial amount of money that was given to us from his mother (essentially an early inheritance). The money from his mum is roughly 25% of the total value of the new house.

I work full time while DH runs his own business. He makes approx 3-4 times as much as I do, and is able to write a lot of the family expenses off under his business. So while he says he pays for everything, that isn't 100% true because some bits such as mobile phones, and other small expenses are written off as business expenses.

We live a good lifestyle. I don't ask for much. I give DH 40% of my paycheque each month. I put 14% into a long term savings account, some goes into short term savings, credit card payment, life insurance, etc. I put 14% into my monthly spending account to cover things for myself such clothing, hair cuts, activities, coffee / meals out with friends, etc.
I don't eat much while at home, so I don't cost a lot to 'keep around'. I also pay for some of the children's clothing, a weekly activity class and other bits when they need them.

DH covers the bulk of the household expenses including school fees, children's activities, the bulk of the mortgage, household bills, etc. A lot of the monthly expenses would be viewed as luxuries, but he refuses to compromise on them for the sake of the children.

DH has several expensive hobbies that require a lot of space which is partly why we have had to move into a much larger home. Without them and the space they require we could make do with a smaller home. He wouldn't like that though, as he likes the 'status' and feeling of achievement that comes with a larger home.

DH has always had big aspirations and has done everything he can to make those happen. I am appreciative of this and have benefitted from them (house, etc). I have had a rough time career wise not living up to my (and his!) full aspirations and potential due to undiagnosed ADHD for 40years.

DH has always said I need to contribute more, and doesn’t think it’s right that he pays for everything. He says I don’t contribute anything and basically thinks I sponge off of him.

He doesn’t like my very small group of friends because the majority of them are divorced and / or aren’t high earners and are sponging off their wealthier husbands.

DH and I haven’t got the greatest relationship, but I would never leave him. He claims the same about me, but is verbally and emotionally abusive a lot of the time and has threatened me with divorce quite a few times over the years, but then says he’d never actually do it.

We are now at a cross roads where he is essentially making me agree to and sign the papers that say I’m only entitled to 25% of the house in the event of divorce. He claims he’s STILL giving me 25% and believes he’s being generous because I ‘don’t contribute anything’ and haven’t put any money towards the down payment.

I pointed out that I give him 40% of my paycheque (with plans to contribute almost 50% in a couple months), but he said he has nothing to do with that because it’s the vale of the house and the money that his mum has given to us. So he’s trying to protect that because she wanted to give it as a gift so she could see our children have a nice house.

I do understand his point of view on that and the fact that £400k is essentially his inheritance. But for years and years he’s made me feel worthless because he’s always said he wished I earned more and I don’t contribute anything. But I work my ass off and have had my own struggles with ADHD that have held me back in so many areas of life and my career. As much as I’d love to I can’t go back in time and change that.

Now he’s being nasty and saying I’m showing my true colours and being greedy by wanting more than 25% of the house in my name. He keeps reassuring me that if something else happens like death it’d would all still go to me. But that it’s only if I divorced him that the 25% would come into play. He keeps saying if I divorced him, because he'd never divorce me. But it would be divorce in general.

I realise this has been long, and thank you for reading if you got this far.

I’m so hurt and upset right now I don’t know what to do. He’s throwing insults at me now insisting I’m only in it for the money and I’m showing my true colours, and just trying to make me look like a selfish evil person. I don't know what to do. I don't like fighting or arguing and I don't like being difficult. He's pressuring me to do this and I don't feel comfortable with all of this.

OP posts:
AlliWantIsARoomSomewheeeere · 13/08/2025 23:08

SarahSaharah · 13/08/2025 22:37

Is Joint Tenants applicable to a mortgage?
Do you not mean Tenants in Common?
There is a difference.

You should not sign ANYTHING without showing a solicitor who can guide you.

Honestly, you have no idea what you are signing.
Take legal advice FIRST.

Joint tenants is automatically equal and one share goes to the other if anything were to happen
tenants in common retain their own shares and can will them as they please

lolapops1 · 14/08/2025 07:32

The bigger house is for him. Let him go to it.
You & the kids buy something within your means.
He is using your ADHD against you and thinking it will hold you back.
Start talking to those friends and ask for life admin help from them.
Start putting yourself and your children first.

Bellsbeachwaves · 14/08/2025 07:50

peevedpartner · 13/08/2025 20:31

Thank you again for all your replies. It's given me a lot to think about.

Last night he brought me a bunch of papers to sign. All loose with the signature pages on the top. I had to ask him where the rest of the paperwork was and made sure to match up each signature page to the correct accompanying document pages. He'd not signed anything yet, but I made sure to read everything throughly. The Joint Ownership form was the last one.

I made sure to tick the 'Joint Tenants' box which laid out in the document that would mean each party is entitled to an equal share of the property. I signed it and took a photo.

When I went to give him the stack of papers he said he'd sign them later which was a bit strange because he's always going on at me about doing things now not later. After a few minutes he said he was coming up to bed and I said I was going up too. I went up and could hear something downstairs so thinking he might have been on the phone with his mum I went back down to check.

Turns out he was watching a show called Finding Alice on Netflix. I'd not heard of it but I googled it and the show is about a woman who lived with her partner in their dream home. They weren't married. He died and she discovers all these shady things in his past. From what I've read online she struggles to pay the mortgage and maintain the house and she goes a bit crazy.

It could just be a coincidence with timings that he's watching this, but it's made me even more suspicious that he's been watching it trying to understand UK housing and marriage laws.

I never saw the copies with his signature before he sent them off today. But I will be emailing the solicitor to ask for copies just to make sure he didn't mess about with the Joint Tenancy form after I went to bed.

You are really very vulnerable and might think about getting a solicitor. I think it's clear from this post that divorce is on the cards. He wants you out I imagine and won't say it directly but will engineer your downfall. Sounds dramatic but if he didn't he wouldn't be doing what he's doing. There would be some respect for a start.

Think. Stop being fragile. Start playing hardball.

Dutchhouse14 · 14/08/2025 09:28

You are married, you have DC, it should be an equal partnership, a team, so everything 50/50 including the house.
Do not sign anything giving you 25% and him 50%

ZingyLemonMoose · 14/08/2025 10:34

I’d be half tempted to agree, then show him how much that agreement is worth by divorcing him and taking half anyway. I’d be reporting him for tax fraud to boot - writing off family expenses as business expenses is fraud.

TiredMummma · 14/08/2025 18:16

yikes. I have no clue why you are not just divorcing now. You’ll get 50% so that includes 50% of 400k and the value of the house, his crypto etc. etc. if the kids come with you, you get maintenance AND you work?? More than enough for kids - I think you need a reality check a bit on that. He sounds so awful your kids will not respect you for staying once they are old enough to understand who he is

Bathingforest · 14/08/2025 18:45

Him watching such a strange movie....could it be coincidence or a sign

RosaMundi27 · 14/08/2025 21:12

Please get a solicitor - you really do need one.

Plumnora · 14/08/2025 22:53

Hmm. Sorry but DH sounds like a wanker. A controlling, bullying one.
And to be honest you don't seem to be very happy at all.
Please do not do this.

Imisssleep2 · 16/08/2025 05:49

Firstly he sounds like an ar*e, this mental abuse is not okay. I am not sure I would be making more, bigger financial commitments with him when he acts like that.

Secondly, did you take time out of your career to have the children? Do you work less to care for them? If so, that is your financial contribution rights there. Do you do the house work and washing etc, and he does none? If it was me I'd be inclined to add all that up over the years and present that as a monetary amount to him so he can understand what you have probably sacrificed for the family, as it always seems to be the woman who does the sacrifices.

Also speak to a lawyer, some give a free elfirst consultation hour.

arcticpandas · 16/08/2025 06:00

You would be better off divorcing him NOW before moving houses. I couldn't live with someone I considered an ennemy and he clearly is. He will still have to pay for his children.

IamNotBeingUnreasonable · 16/08/2025 06:09

No don't agree to this. House is 50% yours.
Stop giving him 40% of your income.

Movingonup313 · 18/08/2025 22:33

Where are you at now OP?

Have you had a look at E.g. Womans Aid - it helped me in the early days - there was a list of all of the different types of abusive behaviour. Your posts indicate you live a significant amount of abuse. Does he support you in any way at all - any kindness or caring or mutual planning. Your posts suggest you live in a very toxic environment. It will be doing your confidence and thought process no good. The abuse leads to stress which has many symptoms - his abuse seems to be causing your symptoms. Im sorry you are in this situation. A lot of women on this post have been through this and are trying to support you - speaking to a GOOD lawyer is crucial. Id start opening letters to get names/details of pensions and savings accounts. It might be something simple like a pension holder sending new t&c but at the least you find out who the provider is - and you might need to accumulate all this info for what will inevitably happen further down the line.....because he is likely to hide "his" assets.

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