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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:
Youngeryoungsuddenly · 10/01/2026 19:25

My married friends inherited a lot from her side of the family.They’ve helped their kids but are now busy spending the money together, mostly on travelling the world. They have world cruises, they’ve bought a swanky motorhome, which they tour Europe with.

Neither of them ever considered that the money was just hers.

Get a grip OP and enjoy whatever is to come.

AlexStocks · 11/01/2026 02:25

This is truly a weird way to completely F yourself over.

LBA40 · 11/01/2026 08:24

Not sure if you’d be into this kind of thing but I listened to an “abundance” meditation every day for 21 days from an abundance course by Deepak Chopra. It’s supposed to help you to feel more open to abundance and my mum said she noticed a big (positive) difference in my mentality at the time. I think you need to open yourself to abundance and feel grateful rather than guilty. (And sod his parents’ rude comments about gold digging. It’s downright sexist. Bringing up three children is a huge job and you doing most of the leg work there means that your DH has been able to work as hard as he has.)

ClemenceD · 11/01/2026 08:37

I thought you were going to say that your FIL had always disapproved of you, and that, nearing the time of his demise, had acquired a sudden, overpowering conviction that, “I would have my son be a beggar in the street before I ever let my earthly treasure fall into the hands of that woman!” And I imagined your DH had said, “And I would rather us live as hoboes under a bridge than ever forsake the hand of my beloved OP!” And then Noble Op, with a soft look at her DH that said more about Woman’s capacity for the truest, most sacred form of Love than any of our best 100 sonnets could, said, “Oh no, my Darling. I could not bear to be the instrument by which you were separated from your Birthright! Let us welcome the cruel axe of Destiny, and smile into each other’s eyes as it severs us, and move into a pair of semis.” Reader, she divorced him.

Pherian · 11/01/2026 13:43

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?

Like another has said - what are you on about ?

Has your husband said he wants a divorce ? Have you ever added up what a house wife is worth ?

Bonkers1966 · 11/01/2026 14:24

Have you seen a mental health specialist? A solicitor will get this sorted out for you in 3 weeks. The issue is not with inheritance, it's you and your bizarre notions which are not healthy.

Cara707 · 11/01/2026 15:46

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.

Hmm yeah!

DeeLasVegas · 12/01/2026 18:40

Have you heard of writing a will? Never heard such a bunch of nonsense in my entire life 🤦🏻‍♀️

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