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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel devastated - husband credit card up to £23k

226 replies

Willowtree87 · 28/04/2026 06:00

When I met my husband I fell for him for lots of different reasons, and one of them being that he was a stable and sensible person. I came from a really volatile family so the fact he was calm and “together” was really appealing to me (among other things). Another aspect of this was that he was financially responsible - he’d saved £12k and seemed to have good money management. I on the other hand had never learnt to manage money well at all. I was living in debt and probably also due to adhd could not get a grip of finances. I had a good job as a teacher but never lived within my means.
Anyway further down the line we bought a lovely house, got married. We got into debt over the wedding but had a plan to pay it off (around £8k). I know this was a mistake in itself but we’d had a tough time with my family being awful so I think we just thought let’s have a nice time and pay it back.

Despite best intentions we’ve never got rid of the debt. We’ve transferred it to 0% cards and managed it but never got rid. Various life events put us under stress and I think we just kept kicking the debt ball down the road if that makes sense.

Fast forward 8 years and we’re struggling under a large mortgage, elevated food bills, a house to renovate, two kids to pay for. I thought we still had the debt under credit and were chipping away at it. I think in the back of my mind I’d wondered if it might have crept up a bit but I still thought it was a manageable amount that we could get rid of if we properly focused on it.

Yesterday the debt crossed my mind and the fact I don’t have access to the balance on the credit cards bugged me and I said to my husband can you look into whether I can download the app for the cards even though my name isn’t on them so that I can monitor them too and make payments off the balance as and when I want to. He said sure. Last night I asked him dare I ask what the balance is at now and he said £23k. You could see the fear in his eyes. I was absolutely shocked.
Hes assured me there’s nothing untoward on there it’s simply food shops, petrol, house insurance lump payments etc that have made it go up.
i just feel so betrayed. He said he just wanted me to have the things that I wanted and didn’t want to say no. But im not high maintenance I don’t have any designer things. I do have adhd so I get fixated on doing things like decorating and fritter money. But I think if I’d known how bad the debt was I would have stopped the spending.
I don’t know what to do. He’s been up all night upset.
He has had a wage increase recently which he says means he can start paying off £600 per month off the card. The only reason he hasn’t done this yet is because we have to have some unavoidable work done on the house which is costing £2500.

how am I supposed to feel in this situation? My instinct is to team together to sort it out. I’ve taken the credit cards off him and we can get this debt gone with focus. But I also don’t know if I’m being a mug. Has he betrayed me? I don’t know. My family have betrayed me financially in the past and now I feel like my husband has done the same.

OP posts:
Dancingsquirrels · 28/04/2026 15:19

Seems really unfair to blame him

Sounds like neither of you were on top of it

What's the £2,500 "unavoidable" work you're about to do on the house? That would clear 10% of your credit card debt

Willowtree87 · 28/04/2026 17:43

Dancingsquirrels · 28/04/2026 15:19

Seems really unfair to blame him

Sounds like neither of you were on top of it

What's the £2,500 "unavoidable" work you're about to do on the house? That would clear 10% of your credit card debt

Dropped kerb. We have to go through a council approved company so they’re charging the earth for a small job because they know they’ve got us over a barrel.

OP posts:
Willowtree87 · 28/04/2026 17:45

Willowtree87 · 28/04/2026 17:43

Dropped kerb. We have to go through a council approved company so they’re charging the earth for a small job because they know they’ve got us over a barrel.

Our permit for the drives kerb runs out next month and we’ll have to reapply which will cost more money

OP posts:
bafta16 · 28/04/2026 17:53

What do you think of my money saving ideas OP? It's painful at first but you get used to it.

Dancingsquirrels · 28/04/2026 18:32

Willowtree87 · 28/04/2026 17:45

Our permit for the drives kerb runs out next month and we’ll have to reapply which will cost more money

An annual parking permit would d cost way less than £2,500, surely?

Better to focus on clearing the debt, IMHO

Breadcat24 · 28/04/2026 20:41

You kept your head in the sand about finances.
Time to step up and make a plan together

Pessismistic · 29/04/2026 17:58

Op it’s good your aware of it now but I would be definitely going through it all and see if you can get rid off anything but always be involved with household stuff as one day he might not be there and you will need to deal with it it’s hard but sounds like you will get through it.

Doubledenim305 · 29/04/2026 18:00

Get in touch with the charity CAP
I have only ever heard very good things about the. Don't struggle on your own.

NFLsHomeGirl · 29/04/2026 18:01

Can you add it to the mortgage??? It'll add &200 a month maybe?

Single50something · 29/04/2026 18:03

Its not betrayal. He has prob been using it tp keep you all going..you should have been checking the app if its joint debt? Who pays the bill? As it will have gone up dramatically since it was 8k
Work together to pay it off.

MMAS · 29/04/2026 18:32

So, it appears from one of your further posts you have agreed to work together given peoples responses. I wonder if that means you have actually given him the credit cards back seeing as you were, at the very least, responsible for the spending too. By your own admission you fritter money away not him. Not sure how you can deem yourself as being betrayed. How controlling is that. Whilst the debt is both of your responsibilities, I question how much control your husband actually has in your relationship and feel very sorry for him. Speak to your Doctor with regards to getting help for impulsive decisions and give your husband a break.

UhOhRatPoo · 29/04/2026 18:34

Park on the street. You can’t afford a driveway and it is a luxury anyway.

BoldRobin · 29/04/2026 18:36

Sorry but you arent stupid. You must have known things cost money. You cant scapegoat him with this just because he had access to the app. This is 100% pure ufiltered avoidance. It can be fixed but falling out will solve nothing. You are a team and both responsible. Tackle it as a unit

Bikergran · 29/04/2026 18:37

You spent it. It's your joint responsibility to pay it off. Do you work? If not, you should. Look at every way you can economise and take debt advice NOW.

riceuten · 29/04/2026 18:51

You don't run up a £23k debt through "food shopping". He is probably gambling or using recreational drugs. He needs to come clean with you - otherwise this will never be resolved

redskyAtNigh · 29/04/2026 18:58

riceuten · 29/04/2026 18:51

You don't run up a £23k debt through "food shopping". He is probably gambling or using recreational drugs. He needs to come clean with you - otherwise this will never be resolved

It's not just "food shopping". £8K is wedding debt, there are also house renovations, large mortgage payments and OP "frittering". Plus some of it is probably interest. Basically it's years of living beyond their means.

I know lots of people on MN always jump to the worst conclusion about men, but no reason to assume the worst in this situation.

Nearly50omg · 29/04/2026 19:07

Your dropped curb is NOT essential!!! Cut up the credit cards and delete them
off your phones! Only spend your wages on what you can afford AFTER you’ve paid essential bills and repayment of loans etc! Pay extra on the CC and loans and it will go a lot faster! And open a savings account for REAL essentials/emergencies and never rely on CC’s

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 29/04/2026 19:08

I think the good thing is that you’ve been honest in your OP so you’re getting honest answers.

I agree it’s a time for working together to sort this out, not for blaming your husband or feeling betrayed. It sounds like you both contributed to the debt and are both responsible for it.

Obviously have a look at the statements so that you too know where it’s been going - and that will also help you to understand where you need to make the cuts.

Martin Lewis himself apparently has ADHD so budgeting with that condition can be done! I think the trick is to get yourself obsessed with saving and getting the best price possible/ avoiding things you don’t need. Then you get dopamine from saving in the way you once did from spending.

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 29/04/2026 19:11

redskyAtNigh · 29/04/2026 18:58

It's not just "food shopping". £8K is wedding debt, there are also house renovations, large mortgage payments and OP "frittering". Plus some of it is probably interest. Basically it's years of living beyond their means.

I know lots of people on MN always jump to the worst conclusion about men, but no reason to assume the worst in this situation.

Also, you’d be surprised at how people do run up debts on “day to day life”, and things that can be explained away as “food shopping etc” - food shopping can be used as a term to cover constant top up shopping (do you remember the poster who was aghast at the cost of buying berries daily for her children to “inhale”?), takeaways, fizzy drinks and all sorts of non essentials.

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 29/04/2026 19:12

Willowtree87 · 28/04/2026 17:45

Our permit for the drives kerb runs out next month and we’ll have to reapply which will cost more money

Sunken costs fallacy.

You haven’t got the money to pursue this, so don’t.

Kingdomofsleep · 29/04/2026 19:14

riceuten · 29/04/2026 18:51

You don't run up a £23k debt through "food shopping". He is probably gambling or using recreational drugs. He needs to come clean with you - otherwise this will never be resolved

Well that's just not true. They started with £8k of debt. At 22% compound interest that's over £30k after 8 years without adding to it at all.

I think they started with £8k and just never paid it off. They only repaid ongoing borrowing.

It's not a sensible way to start a marriage. A wedding is just the first day of your marriage. Why sabotage your marriage by starting it by getting into huge debt? Terrible idea

Barbieplane · 29/04/2026 19:16

.

dementedmummy · 29/04/2026 19:20

Willowtree87 · 28/04/2026 06:00

When I met my husband I fell for him for lots of different reasons, and one of them being that he was a stable and sensible person. I came from a really volatile family so the fact he was calm and “together” was really appealing to me (among other things). Another aspect of this was that he was financially responsible - he’d saved £12k and seemed to have good money management. I on the other hand had never learnt to manage money well at all. I was living in debt and probably also due to adhd could not get a grip of finances. I had a good job as a teacher but never lived within my means.
Anyway further down the line we bought a lovely house, got married. We got into debt over the wedding but had a plan to pay it off (around £8k). I know this was a mistake in itself but we’d had a tough time with my family being awful so I think we just thought let’s have a nice time and pay it back.

Despite best intentions we’ve never got rid of the debt. We’ve transferred it to 0% cards and managed it but never got rid. Various life events put us under stress and I think we just kept kicking the debt ball down the road if that makes sense.

Fast forward 8 years and we’re struggling under a large mortgage, elevated food bills, a house to renovate, two kids to pay for. I thought we still had the debt under credit and were chipping away at it. I think in the back of my mind I’d wondered if it might have crept up a bit but I still thought it was a manageable amount that we could get rid of if we properly focused on it.

Yesterday the debt crossed my mind and the fact I don’t have access to the balance on the credit cards bugged me and I said to my husband can you look into whether I can download the app for the cards even though my name isn’t on them so that I can monitor them too and make payments off the balance as and when I want to. He said sure. Last night I asked him dare I ask what the balance is at now and he said £23k. You could see the fear in his eyes. I was absolutely shocked.
Hes assured me there’s nothing untoward on there it’s simply food shops, petrol, house insurance lump payments etc that have made it go up.
i just feel so betrayed. He said he just wanted me to have the things that I wanted and didn’t want to say no. But im not high maintenance I don’t have any designer things. I do have adhd so I get fixated on doing things like decorating and fritter money. But I think if I’d known how bad the debt was I would have stopped the spending.
I don’t know what to do. He’s been up all night upset.
He has had a wage increase recently which he says means he can start paying off £600 per month off the card. The only reason he hasn’t done this yet is because we have to have some unavoidable work done on the house which is costing £2500.

how am I supposed to feel in this situation? My instinct is to team together to sort it out. I’ve taken the credit cards off him and we can get this debt gone with focus. But I also don’t know if I’m being a mug. Has he betrayed me? I don’t know. My family have betrayed me financially in the past and now I feel like my husband has done the same.

What's done is done but use this as a massive wake up call to you both to budget and clear the debt. Look up Dave Ramsay and the baby steps - it's free and works if you are both prepared to get on board and get rid of the debt. Worked like magic for me - even if you don't believe in all the steps, following most of it should get you there. Look at Dave Ramsay, Rachel Cruize, Jade Warshaw and Ramsay Solutions on Facebook for inspiration and a tribe of people getting themselves out of debt. Good luck 🤞🏻

KostaBoda · 29/04/2026 19:28

Can you ignite a fixation on debt-clearing, OP? My oldest DC, who is autistic, didn't really have much of a grip on personal finances but sort of tuned into money as a specialist interest. She now saves like a boss and keeps on top of every last aspect of her income and outgoings. She's got an incredible capacity to 'get into' stuff and knew her money management wasn't great and would be a barrier to independence, so she turned it into an interest.
Good luck, OP.

DarkForces · 29/04/2026 19:30

Is a parking pass for a year really £2.5k? That's over 10% of your debt that could be paid off.