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Just found out husband has run up £65K debt

242 replies

Coggles7 · 13/05/2025 13:35

So to cut a long story short, I’ve just found out after 10 years of marriage that my husband has run up £65K of debt. I’m panicking about the financial impact but I hope that can be sorted. But I’m more hurt by the level of deception and lies that have got us to this point. I also feel really stupid for my own part in this - but feel like he’s been dishonest so I’ve made choices I wouldn’t otherwise have made (I don’t mean I’ve spent on huge things; but if I’d known the level of debt I would’ve cancelled Sky or not gone out for a meal etc!). And now I don’t know if I can trust him on anything?!

It’s also probably reasonable to add that our relationship initially started as an affair. I made it clear I couldn’t cope with lies and wasn’t going to be the ‘other woman’. He left his wife within 3 weeks of meeting me because I said I wasn’t getting involved. He then lived on his own and we had a 2 year relationship before getting married. He’d also previously had an affair which had gone on for a year, his ex found out. So yes, great start I realise. But I thought I’d made it clear I hate lying.

He pays a significant amount of maintenance to his first wife for teenage kids (which he absolutely should). I get nothing for my 2 children who live with us full time (not his). The mortgage and most bills have always only been in my name. This is where I take responsibility for my part - I’ve always felt ok about this because a) it was my house when we met, and b) it felt fair that he contributed through the ‘nice to have’ stuff as I managed the household. This has meant we’ve kept finances very separate and he’s clearly therefore been able to run up credit cards and loans in his name only because he didn’t have the mortgage in his name.
Obviously some of this spending will have benefited me which I realise, but it’s choices like a meal out once a month - not spending on extravagant things.
It’s only come out after a lot of lies upon lies to avoid telling the truth. I don’t understand the level of debt - we both earn good salaries, we don’t go on holidays, we do run 2 cars, and £12K of debt is on his car. But the rest he reckons has just gradually built up. I have a banger! We don’t have an extravagant lifestyle at all.
I’ve arranged to see a financial advisor to help sort a payment plan but I feel really let down. I work so hard full time and long hours, but I thought it was worth it knowing I could retire in 10-15 years with the house paid off. Now it looks like we’ll be spending the rest of our lives sorting it out, I don’t know if the house is at risk even though it’s not in his name, and it feels like he’s been lying our entire marriage. He doesn’t seem to comprehend the level of deception. He says he loves me and hasn’t lied, he doesn't see why it’s making me question our entire marriage. How do I sort this?

OP posts:
AthWat · 14/05/2025 09:28

AthWat · 14/05/2025 09:27

I mean, the fact that she hates lying is hardly unusual. There aren't many people who being asked what they want in a partner would say "someone who lies to me and runs up huge debts".

In fact it appears that half the OP's problem is that she seems to believe she is unusual in not wanting to be lied to, and once she "made it clear" she doesn't like it, a known liar would say "oh righto then" and stop. As though the guy's previous wife had said "lie to me all you want, it's ok", and she was going to be different.

Edited

Quoted myself by mistake somehow!

taxguru · 14/05/2025 19:32

First thing is to INSIST that he gives you all his bank account/credit card account statements for at least the past three years, so that you can work through them to see where the money has gone. It's an insane amount of debt to build up if he's nothing to show for it. Don't take any excuses. Make it a deal breaker - i.e. provide them or he moves out! Almost certainly he's gambling, buying drugs, or spending on other women. You can't go on with the marriage unless he is honest with you as to where the cash has gone. The slight glimmer of hope is that the bank statements show he's just spendthrift and hopeless with money, i.e. forgetting to cancel unnecessary direct debits, wasting money on lots of coffees, snacks, takeaways etc during the working day rather than taking packed lunches or buying meal deals, etc - at least that kind of waste can be controlled and him brought back into line for the future.

2chocolateoranges · 14/05/2025 19:43

AthWat · 14/05/2025 09:24

Hey, that's not her fault. She made it clear.

She was his affair partner, so she knew how good a liar he was!

Lovethesparklylights · 19/05/2025 06:52

See a lawyer and divorce him pdq. Do not take on his debt. Do not add him to the house - are you crazy?
Don't ever do this until you have an independent valuation and they put in half the value of it that you already own AND agree to pay half of all costs going forward AND you have an iron clad legal document for who get what and who has to move out if you split.

He's a liar. And a cheater. You met him when he was cheater and left a vacancy when you married hjm. It wasn't his first time so he didn't learn a lesson etc.
You can't trust him and you can't wreck your own and your kids financial future by staying.

GoldLash · 19/05/2025 07:01

I would hazard a guess that he’s not paying his ex nearly as much maintenance as he makes out

Debtcrusher · 17/08/2025 22:06

Hi Coggles,
I just read your post and wondered how you are getting on… I felt only empathy for you when I read your post as it sounds like you put all your eggs in one basket with this man …
I hope you are coping ok - emotionally and financially.

EasternSkies · 21/08/2025 08:05

This thread is a few months old, but interested in how you have been getting on.

And amazed at the number of posts saying blithely ‘divorce him’.

The OP bought the house before marriage and had paid the mortgage since.

On divorce he potentially walks away with half her house.

AgathaCristina · 21/08/2025 21:11

MyKingdomForACat · 13/05/2025 13:53

You call it debt. I’d call it karma

Me too!

PurpleLeather · 22/08/2025 11:47

I’d let him and his debt go. Once a serial cheat, always a serial cheat. You were his bit on the side, who replaced you? You left a vacancy - I’d bet that’s where some of the money went. What a snake. Why on earth do you even want him? He’s a liar, he’s drowning in debt and he treats you appallingly from where I’m looking. Get some self-respect and dump this loser. It’s your house, get him out of it before you’re married long enough for him to have a claim on it or he has you working yourself into the ground paying off HIS debt. Get rid and nurture yourself going forward, be without a man until your judgment is better and never choose a life with a man who was married when you met him, they show you what they are when they do that x

Gettingbysomehow · 22/08/2025 12:52

EasternSkies · 21/08/2025 08:05

This thread is a few months old, but interested in how you have been getting on.

And amazed at the number of posts saying blithely ‘divorce him’.

The OP bought the house before marriage and had paid the mortgage since.

On divorce he potentially walks away with half her house.

No he doesn't. He is not entitled to anything OP owned before the marriage.
I was married for 20 years to a similar dickhead. He got 10k as I owned nearly all of it before I met him.
He was livid. Wanted to come back after hearing that. Er....nope.

winter8090 · 22/08/2025 20:52

Debt aside, how is your marriage? Do you trust him? This is a separate issue to the debt.

Next how did he run up the debt? Obviously outgoings exceed incomings, but why.

i think you need a joint plan to work through this together.

mrsmiawallace3 · 29/01/2026 21:53

I don't mean to be rude, but the fact that a man who cheated on his spouse, not once, but twice, should then proceed to cheat on you financially, should surely not come as that much of a surprise?

pocketpairs · 29/01/2026 22:50

Guess they both deserve each other..

LucyLoo1972 · 30/01/2026 04:31

TallulahBetty · 13/05/2025 14:13

This is good news. I know you're a partnership, but you are not responsible for the debts, legally or morally.

is that the case? I thought if you are married then you are jointly responsible but im pleased to hear you are not.

PrincessofWells · 30/01/2026 05:03

arcticpandas · 13/05/2025 15:06

Well since they are married it's joint ownership according to the law UNLESS OP ringfenced it prior to the marriage.

This is incorrect.

TallulahBetty · 30/01/2026 08:50

LucyLoo1972 · 30/01/2026 04:31

is that the case? I thought if you are married then you are jointly responsible but im pleased to hear you are not.

No. I am a debt advisor and can confirm 1000% you are not responsible for a partner's debts.

LucyLoo1972 · 30/01/2026 08:51

TallulahBetty · 30/01/2026 08:50

No. I am a debt advisor and can confirm 1000% you are not responsible for a partner's debts.

thanks - good to know

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