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Divorce/separation

Here you'll find divorce help and support from other Mners. For legal advice, you may find Advice Now guides useful.

Husband wants to separate - finances / house / child maintenance questions…..

32 replies

ThatGirlx · 09/01/2026 16:56

My husband and I have been together around 12 years, married for 4. We have a toddler. Recently my husband has said he wants to separate because he says he hasn’t felt the same love for me “for years”, even before we had a child, and that he doesn’t want any more children and even doubts even getting married. This has come completely out of the blue for me and I’m distraught.

There has been no affair (I genuinely believe this, and his parents also don’t think there is another woman). It feels more like a midlife crisis or him walking away from normal dry patches (bickering, snapping at each other, lack of affection etc) that many couples experience, particularly after having a baby. He doesn’t seem willing to work on things and is avoiding the issues rather than addressing them.

We jointly own our home 50/50, but I put in the original £40k deposit to get us on the property ladder (I have proof of this and sending it to solicitors for house purchase). There is no deed of trust in place. I understand that in the event of separation, a court may take this into account alongside the fact that I’m the primary carer for our toddler, potentially leading to a 60–70% split in my favour, though I know nothing is guaranteed.

Over the last 3 months, my husband has repeatedly left the family home for weeks at a time to have time to himself and spends most weekends staying with friends. Leaving me full caring for our child. He detaches from family life when it suits him, then drifts back in. Because of this instability, I’ve seriously considered applying for an Occupation Order (possibly without notice), but I’m worried it may escalate things unnecessarily and “rock the boat” too much at this stage.

At the same time, when he is at home, he appears to be coexisting under the same roof largely because it’s financially safer for him, rather than because the situation is healthy or workable. There is no real discussion about separation, co-parenting, or future arrangements. It feels as though he wants the emotional freedom of separation without facing the practical or financial consequences of actually separating, which is becoming increasingly unsustainable for me.

A significant issue is childcare. Due to my full-time working hours, I rely on him for morning nursery drop-offs and pick-ups. On several occasions during arguments, he has threatened to simply leave and not do these, effectively using childcare as leverage. He has also suggested that I should look for a local job, reduce my hours, or even stop working and go on benefits, which feels unfair and unrealistic, especially as I’ve always worked and contributed financially.

He says he wants to move out, but in reality he can’t afford to rent properly and is now looking at house shares - so going back on himself like student times. I can’t afford the full mortgage and bills on my own — my salary only just covers my half, which I’ve always paid.

My questions are:

• If he moves out, is he still legally responsible for paying half the mortgage and household bills, given that it’s jointly owned and our child lives here full time?
• On top of that, would he also be legally required to pay child maintenance, even if he continues contributing to the mortgage/bills?
• Is it reasonable for me to expect that he cannot simply walk away financially while I shoulder the childcare and housing responsibility?
• Has anyone been in a similar position where one partner emotionally checks out but avoids the financial reality of separation?

I’m trying to stay calm and practical, but the situation feels very one-sided and emotionally draining, especially with a young child involved. Any advice or similar experiences would be really appreciated.

OP posts:
ByQuaintAzureWasp · 13/01/2026 15:08

It's a joint mortgage so needs to pay 50%. If he refuses the house will get repossessed eventually or, you pay and you should get this back when you eventually do the financial settlement.

He's not responsible for bills if ge's not living there, though perhaps he is for house insurance.

Dont give up your job whatever you do. If he moves out apply for single council tax reduction and child maintenance.

I dobt think he is liable for nursery fees if he's paying cm, unless on 'his' child days.

FancyCatSlave · 13/01/2026 15:28

You need to get the house listed for sale and work on the assumption you get zero from
him for your affordability. If you can only barely afford half you can’t afford to buy him out.

Get the divorce underway and then you can negotiate with him regarding shared custody and hopefully he will agree a pattern that is helpful for nursery pick ups. They aren’t forever so I wouldn’t panic about that.

My suggestion is to het the forms filed and start your 20 week cooling off period. Use that time to get the house ready for sale and get legal
advice on the finances. If you can agree it amicably it is so much easier and cheaper! We managed to do that so the whole divorce was about ÂŁ1400. We are divorced now but continuing to live together until the house is sold which is tricky but practical.

Clavella · 13/01/2026 15:42

He’s not responsible for 50% of the mortgage; you’re both responsible for 100%. Ultimately the mortgage provider couldn’t care less who pays it.

If you ask him to move out, he probably will stop paying half. I’d grit my teeth, get the house on the market ASAP, decide what contact you want him to have with your child, and apply for CMS. And get a lawyer! Don’t forget pensions.

pastabest · 13/01/2026 15:53

There absolutely is another woman/man.

He's an absolute shit regardless and you are well rid.

Can you find a nursery nearer your work?

GalaxyJam · 13/01/2026 15:58

Realistically, would be even be able to afford half the mortgage and bills on your house, CM plus housing himself/bills etc? The judge wouldn’t rule anything that left him unable to house himself.

glassof · 13/01/2026 16:26

He could move out, not pay any bills or towards the mortgage and then avoid child maintenance too. As many have. You need to get the ball rolling with selling the house and divorce as it doesn't sound like he is going to be financially supportive

millymollymoomoo · 13/01/2026 20:44

@ByQuaintAzureWasp thats not correct as mortgages joint and several liability

aldo op can’t claim monies back if she pays mortgage herself - as she would be getting sole benefit of the asset. Equally divorce doesn’t care who’s paid what

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