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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Thinking of divorcing to protect his inheritance

258 replies

Changeofnameforprivacy · 06/01/2026 00:09

Ok this is going to be a weird one.

With dh for 21 years and a sahm for 18 years by mutual agreement. When we met he was working in his dad’s business, owned his (mortgaged) house. I had a small amount of savings, earned slightly more than him. I lost my job a couple of months before we married, when my skills became obsolete and I started retraining. Then got pregnant and recession hit, and no one was hiring in my new field. I didn’t intend to become a sahm, but we decided to have a second dc while the job market was depressed rather than spreading our family out as we’d initially planned. Dc2 turned out to be dc2 and dc3. Then dc1 was diagnosed with autism and I’ve been as sahm ever since.

Since then, fil retired and dh bought the company off him, paying him in instalments over 15 years. We’ve had some lean years when the company struggled. I would have liked to get back to work but we’d have been worse off financially and had a lower standard of living too. But I’ve always felt that my contribution was equal to dh’s, just different and he has said similar.

However, things are about to change. Dh has negotiated the sale of the company at a very good price, with plans to retire in 5 years time (18 months to complete the sale, with a 3 and a half year earn out). Eventually (hopefully not for a long time though) we anticipate a significant inheritance from his dps who are elderly and in declining health. They have significant investments, and even if they need expensive healthcare couldn’t spend it all. On the other hand I don’t expect to inherit anything from mine as I have a sibling with extra needs who will have to be provided for, and may even need some help from usgoing forward. I’m feeling deeply uncomfortable about it all.

Up to now, if we had broken up, I’d have had no hesitation about dividing the assets down the middle. Despite not contributing financially, I’ve pulled my weight and supported dh’s career at every turn, and done the lions share of parenting. But this money feels like his family money - a company his dad set up, inheritance from them. It feels like the balance of power has tilted. Up to now either of us could have walked away, but now I feel he will be trapped.

We could draw up an agreement that I wouldn’t get any of this money in the event of a split but it wouldn’t stand up if I changed my mind later. I know I keep talking about splitting up, and it’s not on our radar at all. We’re very happy together. But one of the strengths of modern marriage is that people can call time if needed, and walk away if they’re no longer happy.

But another scenario is that if he died and I remarried and his family money could be inherited by another man. That just doesn’t feel right to me.

I’ve been lying here in bed, turning this over and over in my head since he told me this earlier today and I think the fairest solution would be for us to divorce now, draw up a fair settlement and then just continue to cohabitate. The dc would inherit everything, as is fair. They’ll all be adults by the time he retires so I wouldn’t have to be involved at all.

Knowing him, he won’t see it like this at all. But honestly I think I’m right about this. AIBU?

OP posts:
KabukiNoh · 06/01/2026 00:15

WTF are you on about? Seems like writing wills would be easier than a divorce when you are happy in your marriage. I am not following your logic AT ALL!

ragandbonewoman · 06/01/2026 00:15

Frankly this is one of the weirdest suggestions I’ve ever heard. I cannot fathom from your post why you have given this any thought at all. You are a unit, committed, you have shared a life together and sound happy. If he doesn’t want you/ you don’t want him further down the line, then go through the processes of a fair and amicable split and he can ensure the adult DC are provided for in his will, but getting divorced for the reasons you’ve stated makes a mockery of marriage in my opinion.

HeddaGarbled · 06/01/2026 00:16

Absolutely bonkers. Rip that hair-shirt off and bury it.

AwfullyGood · 06/01/2026 00:17

Are you prone to illogical overthinking?

You are creating problems in your head, that you don't have. You are a team for starters. You appear to have a decent marraige so wft is causing this thinking?

IndigoIsMyFavouriteColour · 06/01/2026 00:18

I don’t get the logic of ‘let’s divorce as we are bound to anyway’ while you are both happily married.

reversegear · 06/01/2026 00:18

You know you can just write this in a will? Or get some legal contracts drafted you don’t need to divorce your DH. Also why on earth would it be his money? Has he said this too you? Or is this all your own thinking?

FollowSpot · 06/01/2026 00:21

OP:

Does your DH have a Will? You both need one anyway. He can leave loads of the family ££ directly to your Dc.

And if you divorce because you fall out… don’t demand any of his inheritance.

There… now stop thinking like this. Your marriage sounds great. If it ain’t broke, don’t break it.

PinkyFlamingo · 06/01/2026 00:22

This reply has been deleted

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GaIadriel · 06/01/2026 00:22

Surely a solicitor could sort this?

PickledElectricity · 06/01/2026 00:23

Are you having some sort of nervous breakdown?

Rollercoaster1920 · 06/01/2026 00:24

The grandparents could leave their wealth to the grandchildren. If they bypass you entirely they avoid 1 generation of inheritance tax.

minipie · 06/01/2026 00:25

This is where the old mumsnet classic “Are you on glue?” comes into its own.

Seriously OP you have a major overthinking problem.

If you or he is concerned about where his inherited money ends up when he’s dead then he can make a will leaving it to his kids.

NotnowMildrid · 06/01/2026 00:28

Nuts.
if he died Do Not get remarried.
It’s that simple.
Whyvon earth would you put yourself in a precarious position!?

Dweetfidilove · 06/01/2026 00:32

I've read some self-sabotaging stuff on MN, but this takes the prize.
This surely isn't real.
Actually, what if he's not as altruistic as you are and just remarries and gives the whole thing away?
Absolutely madness!

DidIJustHearWhatIThinkYouSaid · 06/01/2026 00:36

This is a reverse isn’t it.

Alltheyellowbirds · 06/01/2026 00:44

Is this a reverse? Are you the husband and this is what YOU want?

because it makes ZERO sense otherwise.

LovesLabradors · 06/01/2026 00:45

I clicked on this thinking your DH was going to divorce you in order to protect his future inheritance!
Your thought process is, with greatest respect, completely crazy.
You're talking about something that hasn't even been received yet - and when he does, there are ways it can be ring-fenced, if that's what he wants to do. If you have a great marriage and share everything, hopefully you can just enjoy the inheritance together. Marriage is a legal contract and a sharing of wealth - there are exceptions, but generally inheritances received during the marriage are considered joint assets.

Needspaceforlego · 06/01/2026 00:45

Op surely even if you did acquire some of his money via divorce after the demise of his parents.
Upon your demise it would end up with your joint kids anyway?

And even in event of divorce you still need to provide accommodation etc for the 3 children with each parent.

I think you are over thinking this and being more than a tad daft.

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 06/01/2026 00:46

There is absolutely no way this is real, I'm sorry.

No one who runs a high value company, as is implied between the lines here, would be this clueless about their options, including estate planning.

Go away OP, you ridiculous ghoul.

ChinFluff46 · 06/01/2026 00:48

Actually I thought the OP (and the replies!) made sense.

OP do you not think you've been together long enough to just commit to staying married 😄

See a solicitor for help with wills. Lots of options, lifetime interest trusts etc. If you have a child with ASD they may require support into adulthood.

Diarygirlqueen · 06/01/2026 00:57

Such idiotic thinking and logic.

RudolphRNR · 06/01/2026 00:58

I mean this as kindly as possible, I think you are suffering from chronic anxiety and I recommend you see a GP about it and perhaps look into some counselling to manage your thoughts.

You are happy in your marriage. Both you and your husband agree that your contribution to the family is equal to his. Any money that comes into the family has been and should be shared.

If your husband were to predecease you and you want to remarry, you can ring fence the inheritance for your children instead of your subsequent new husband.

Don't give this non-issue another thought but really, please see someone about your anxiety.

wonderstuff · 06/01/2026 00:59

Absolutely mad, you are the mother of his children therefore you are, and will always be family. If the boot was on the other foot would you divorce him? If you remarry after he dies, it would be reasonable to place some in trust for your children to avoid them losing out in the event of a future stepparent taking the money. You could indeed set up a trust arrangement for them when he inherits, your in laws may still leave it all to charity? Who knows. But I certainly wouldn’t divorce, you’d massively increase the chances of paying inheritance tax if your husband died, talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face!

OtterlyAstounding · 06/01/2026 01:00

Taking this at face value, and assuming it's not a reverse...

Well, to be fair, your husband's money is your money, and vice versa, and I don't see why this is any different. Your husband could win the lottery using a ticket a friend of his that you're not overly familiar with gave him - would you then feel that you need to split up before he redeems it, so that you don't benefit from his ticket, that his friend gave him? After all, it's nowt to do with you, and you wouldn't have earnt it, right?

Also given that you've raised their grandchildren and kept their son happy for 18 and 21 years respectively, wouldn't your FIL and MIL be happy for you to benefit from the inheritance your DH will eventually get?

If your marriage is happy, then it seems easier to just agree not to split up, imo. Just decide that you won't leave him, and if he decides to ditch you against your wishes, well, then you'll probably be happy to take half his inheritance 😂

Also if you do divorce, then how will that affect things such as your next of kin, and who has a say over medical and legal decisions should either of you become incapacitated?

Changeofnameforprivacy · 06/01/2026 01:00

Wow. That’s emphatic.

I’m feeling really shell shocked by this. Maybe I’m not thinking straight at all.

OP posts: