Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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:
moderndilemma · 11/08/2025 15:04

If you divorced, the money is not for 'you' vs 'him', it is so both of you can provide suitable places for your dc to live. Why would he want to penalise them?

Whatever you do, do not sign that agreement.

Ritasueandbobtoo9 · 11/08/2025 15:05

He has coerced the money from his mother. Nasty piece of work!

LeftieRightsHoarder · 11/08/2025 15:05

He’s a liar (saying you don’t contribute anything to the household finances), a shocking skinflint, a tax cheat (claiming personal expenses as business expenses is illegal) and a very unpleasant husband.

As you’ve sold your house, I would take this heaven-sent opportunity to divorce him and set up a happier home with your DC. Make sure you get your full share of the assets.

Klp122 · 11/08/2025 15:05

bumbaloo · 11/08/2025 14:50

You don’t want to be with this horrible bully of a man.
my dh worships me. He pays for everything. I haven’t worked for 30 years. 3dc grown up. I swan about doing what I want and he adores me.
why is anyone with someone who is so horrible to them?
and I have adhd. Which my dh loves as ge says I’m fun to be around

get rid of him and start living life. You will be entitled to more than you think.

Completely unhelpful, borderline smug reply.

JHound · 11/08/2025 15:05

Before I was diagnosed and my mental health was at rock bottom I had a series of 6 o h one sessions with a counsellor. She ultimately told me I can't be helped because I'm living with the problem.

The counsellor is extremely spot on.

Notmycircusnotmyotter · 11/08/2025 15:06

You're not a partnership. Life shouldn't be like this.

Takenoprisoner · 11/08/2025 15:09

Klp122 · 11/08/2025 15:05

Completely unhelpful, borderline smug reply.

Agree!

@peevedpartner I bet your adhd would be a lot easier to manage if you left him. Your mental health would improve no end.

HappyintheHills · 11/08/2025 15:09

peevedpartner · 11/08/2025 14:29

Married close to 20yrs

That’s not a reason to not leave.

MeganM3 · 11/08/2025 15:10

He should have the full amount of the money his mum put in, in the event of divorce. The rest should be 50/50. Anything either of you earns during the marriage is for both of you and 50/50 split in the case of divorce. Don’t sign the document until you’ve had your own independent legal advice.

Theroadt · 11/08/2025 15:12

I think it is perfectly fair to ringfence the £400k and split everything else 50-50. I have no intention of divorcing my husband or he me (as far as I know!) but my twobother houses rented out are kept separate from family finances - our kids will inherit those.

OlderGlaswegianLivingInDevon · 11/08/2025 15:13

You may say that you only have £1000 in savings, but
what does he have in savings

you are married, 50% of his savings are actually yours !!!

You are married to a bully, and he bullies his mum too !

20 years is a long time, do you really really want to be married to him for any longer ?!!!

you don't even want to buy this new house that the two of you can't actually afford without bullied mum's money, he only wants it for status and his expensive hobby/ies.

Divorce now, and there is no need for you all to move into this house,and mum gets to keep her money too !

How old are the children ?

Cadenza12 · 11/08/2025 15:13

See a lawyer and end it. Marriage should be a partnership and yours sounds anything but.

Twiglets1 · 11/08/2025 15:13

He sounds really horrible @peevedpartner

It sounds like you have access to money at the moment. I would use some of it to speak to a solicitor about the whole situation. There are things that can be done legally so you can still own the house in equal shares but his mother's money is protected if she wants it to be. You need proper legal advice. So does he actually.

ProudMaker · 11/08/2025 15:14

its2025 · 11/08/2025 14:11

I dont think I could move and take on a bigger house/mortgage with such a horrible man.

I bet you do the majority of the childcare don't you?
Being married should be a partnership - not a business transaction - fine if he wants to insist on this 25% agreement - tell him you wont agree to that and that you'd rather not move at all.

Then get, in your smaller home that is in joint names equally - start a divorce. Ensuring you have as much record of his full income as possible including all these expenses he seems to be claiming as business ones.

I agree with this, say that you do not want to move under these circumstances.

Newmeagain · 11/08/2025 15:15

You are living with a monster. Who is also committing tax offences, which I hope he gets prosecuted for asap.

ByQuaintAzureWasp · 11/08/2025 15:16

WindyBeech · 11/08/2025 14:06

Aside from your relationship which clearly needs some work if you're to stay together and enjoy life.

The house should be 50:50 but you can sign to agree that the first £400k (possibly linked to inflation or a % increase in house value) is his if it is ever sold. That way, his 'inheritance' is safe, but you are still equal. Although if you think divorce is on the cards just stick with 50:50.

As for his paying for things through his business, it sounds great now but HMRC take a pretty dim view and he should either be paying tax on the benefit or reimbursing for personal use.

This. Whether the house is entirely in his name or your name, in the event of divorce a judge will decide who gets what %.

CopperWhite · 11/08/2025 15:17

He sounds horrible, but it is fair that he wants to protect money given to him by his own parents.

Howmanycatsistoomany · 11/08/2025 15:17

Another vote for LTB.
Honestly OP this is no way to live. This is not how a decent man treats the mother of his children.

Soontobe60 · 11/08/2025 15:17

If the roles were reversed what’s the name Mumsnetters use for a man who’s living with a woman who earns, and pays for significantly more than him? Begins with ‘C’?
I think that the money given to the H from his DM should be ringfenced. If it equates to, say, 20% of the purchase price of the house, then the remaining 80% should be split equally, meaning that the OP owns 40% and the H owns 60%. In reality this would only impact the OP if her H were to die as his share would go to whomever he chose in his Will. In the case of divorce, how much each owns would be pretty irrelevant in the splitting of assets and I suspect that the OP would come out of the marriage significantly better off than him.

Badgerandfox227 · 11/08/2025 15:18

skyeisthelimit · 11/08/2025 14:16

If he wants to protect 25%, and you currently own jointly, then the remaining 75% should be split equally, so ownership would be 62.5/37.5 him/you. That would be a fairer way to split it rather than 75/25.

or as PP says, ringfence £400K and everything above that is split 50/50.

However it is clearly obvious that neither of you like each other, so I don't know why you remain married. Don't buy the house, split now and walk away with a minimum of 50% of the current house (you might get more depending on agreement if you are housing the DC).

This OP. If you have to go ahead with it, then ring fence the 25% and 50/50 split the rest.

I put 4 x what my DP puts into our joint account, but we’re a team and he has as much say as me in everything - holidays, big spending etc. I can’t imagine treating him like your DH. I would expect that he has only been able to climb the ladder so high because you’ve been in the wings supporting him and picking up the slack.

DaisyChain505 · 11/08/2025 15:21

Why are you committing to buying another house with him when you’re clearly in a miserable marriage.

No wonder he wants to protect his inheritance when he too knows the marriage has run its course and is over. It’s just a waiting game until you divorce so he wants his inheritance protected.

BookArt55 · 11/08/2025 15:21

So you (as a couple, on paper) are very comfortable. Yet you can't attend therapy that is beneficial to your wellbeing... because you don't have money? Your husband is not your partner, for this reason alone. He can do expensive, time and space consuming hobbies, but you can't do a basic of prioritising your mental and physical health... this is awful.

You suspect adhd/Asd with you kids (with a much bigger chance given one parent has aadd), but dad refuses to seek support with this. This alone would have me walk. How awful that his needs come above his children's?! Not a loving, caring parent.

You say is he abusive... but that you won't leave. That he is horrible to the children, yet you won't leave. Now, for me, if he is fully invested in this relationship divorce wouldn't be a discussion after how long you've been together. You're both not happy. What he is doing is exerting more control over you, making you financially not able to leave him. Surely a healthy relationship is equal partnership, and that both people are CHOOSING to stay, not made to feel like they need to by guilt, financial abuse... sorry I think it is heading that way, and emotional abuse.

He dislikes your friends... shocking. Because they didn't put up with a shit husband. Badmouths then to try and isolate you?

So many red flags in one post.

Please reconsider your stance. Get out. Not only to save yourself before you are worn down even further, but because you are currently teaching your children that this is a healthy, normal marriage, which is definitely isn't. You know that deep down, your therapist told you, and you're posting here because your gut tells you something isn't right!

Would you be happy if one of your children was in a relationship like yours? I bet the answer is no. Lead by example, get out and teach them to put themselves first in a safe and loving space.

I know it is hard to make that leap. But in a year you won't regret it.

TheStateofRoads · 11/08/2025 15:22

peevedpartner · 11/08/2025 14:03

For the most part he's very kind. He does a lot for the kids. Much more than the average husband / father I'd say (and so he claims!).

But he can get quite verbally nasty to us all. Children both likely ADHD or AuADHD so fragile like me, but he won't let me get them tested. Another thing he's threatened to divorce me over.

So. For the most part he's nice apart from when he's a complete cock.

You can't undo being a complete cock by sometimes being nice.

TaupeLemur · 11/08/2025 15:23

OP, he sounds like he has one foot out the door and you’d be foolish to agree to anything other than equal shares in this house after 20 years of marriage. He’s future proofing for leaving you.
DW and I own everything equally, despite my earning around a third of the salary she does. We’re a family, a team and my contribution to the family has been far more over the years than the £££ I earn - child rearing, compromising on earning power etc.
This man is NOT valuing you. I would start looking at an exit plan- you and your children deserve better. If he’s such great dad, then he can have them 50/50 and continue being a great dad while you have your freedom from his control.

SilverpetalShine · 11/08/2025 15:24

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. I'm pretty sure in law, if you're married it's 50/50? Unless your signing some sort of mid marriage prenup? Please take legal advice. You'd be surprised how people can be duped by loved ones who can be less than honest when it comes to money. Lying by omission is not that honest either and plenty of them do that.