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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:
EveryOtherNameTaken · 13/05/2025 14:20

I'd be gone. Lying seems to be part if his persona.

Thank goodness you didn't put him on your mortgage before this debt.

FiveBarGate · 13/05/2025 14:22

Coggles7 · 13/05/2025 14:12

Thank you. I’ve checked my credit history this week to remortgage (this is what started the whole saga of it all coming out, because he refused to put the mortgage in his name too) and mine is ok.

Well that's the good news then.

You need to do some research/get advice of your own.

Do not commit to any kind of repayment that makes you jointly liable for these debts.

Keep the house solely in your name..

Prepare yourself for more to come and think about what you want here.

AnneElliott · 13/05/2025 14:25

I don’t think k you should be paying this back - and for the relationship to continue surely you need full transparency over the money and where it has gone? A few meals out doesn’t equate to £50k so I’d really want to know what it has been spent on.

lnks · 13/05/2025 14:25

He is a proven lier and he is obviously unwilling to change that. Even if you overcome this he will likely lie about something big in the future, and possibly already has done.

Calliopespa · 13/05/2025 14:26

Moral of the story: if you know a man treated his first wife poorly, don’t assume it will be any different for you.

I know you weren’t “technically” the OW but come on … you knew what he was like. Tbh the throwing over of his marriage within weeks comes across as bad or worse than a simmering affair to me. He just does what he pleases - and you had fair warning.

BeachRide · 13/05/2025 14:28

Untrustworthy man acts untrustworthy shock 🙄

Calliopespa · 13/05/2025 14:28

This is why single women shouldn’t touch married men with barge poles.

The single women are naive enough to think married women are just being self-serving when they say this. In fact, they know a tosser when they see one.

mumto2teenagers · 13/05/2025 14:29

That is a huge amount of debt to be in especially given he doesn't pay a mortgage, this has not been caused by the odd meal out.

Assuming he does earn what you think he does, I would guess at another women given his history or an addiction, gambling or drugs.

skyeisthelimit · 13/05/2025 14:29

OP, I know you were re-mortgaging anyway, but please do not re-mortgage and pay off his debts. Please don't do that. I know somebody who did that to avoid a family member going bankrupt and then the person ran the debt up all over again and went bankrupt anyway, and still owed the mortgage!

Don't take him onto the mortgage or deeds either at any point. He needs to accept that he is a liar and also an addict who can't control his spending.

He needs to show you his bank statements and credit card statements, and you sit down together and record where all the money has gone. He can access them all online, or get copies if necessary, but you do need to see them to understand this together.

Make a spreadsheet of everything on those statements.

It can be quite sobering when they realise where it is all going. I have done this for clients, who claim that they can't afford to live or pay their tax bill, then they cringe when they see how much they have spent on drink or takeaways, days out, hobbies or cash withdrawals, living a life that they can't afford.

You need to take control of the finances, so his salary is paid into your account and you pay for everything. He needs to speak to somebody like Stepchange who will help him to get some debt frozen and work out how much free money he has a month to repay the debts.

ChandrilanDiscoDroid · 13/05/2025 14:31

Look on the bright side OP: now that shit has got boring and real and you aren't all starry-eyed about him anymore, history tells us he'll have another OW soon enough and he'll be her problem.

(Or, quite possibly, he already does and that's where the money's gone.)

CuriousKangaroo · 13/05/2025 14:35

There’s no way he’s run up £65k worth of debts on the odd meal out. If I were you I’d be seeing a divorce lawyer, not a financial advisor.

TheHistorian · 13/05/2025 14:35

Contact your local Citizen's Advice. We have debt advice training. You will need to have a complete breakdown of the debt plus your income/outgoings. There is help available 🤗

Snowdrop4 · 13/05/2025 14:37

Why are you seeing a financial advisor and sorting out a payment plan
He's a grown adult not your child
Let him pay it back it don't effect you
Make sure your getting a fair contribution for the bills from him,and he pays the money back with the rest
If you sort it all out ,he's not talking responsibility,and will do the same again
If you get involved helping him ,he's not taking responsibility for his mess

Snapncrackle · 13/05/2025 14:37

married 10 years
65k debt of which 12 k is his car
so 53k debt over 10 years is roughly £100 a week or 15 a day approx overspend

it’s a lot of money but £15 a day is a 2 coffee and a cake at costa

it won’t even get you 2 large McDonald meals😂

One nice meal out for 2 is easily £100
a trip to the cinema a-£50 -60

a day out to the beach inc petrol food ice creams and your looking at £100

But he’s clearly a liar and a cheat
so it’s up to you how you deal with it all

myplace · 13/05/2025 14:40

How has he been contributing to the household?

And think twice about divorce, it may jeopardise your house- you need advice about that.

MereNoelle · 13/05/2025 14:40

Surely there’s more to it… if you don’t live an extravagant lifestyle and have good salaries then going out for dinner once a month isn’t going to lead to that level of debt, is it? Equally cancelling Sky wouldn’t have prevented the issue.
So what has he really spent the money on?

AliBaliBee1234 · 13/05/2025 14:41

You made it clear you hate lying yet got into a relationship with a man who was taken.

He'd already had an affair before you. What were you thinking? Of course he's an untrustworthy man.

Why you're stressing about spending your salary sorting it out I don't know. Your house is yours and none of the debt is in your name. Get him gone?

AliBaliBee1234 · 13/05/2025 14:42

MereNoelle · 13/05/2025 14:40

Surely there’s more to it… if you don’t live an extravagant lifestyle and have good salaries then going out for dinner once a month isn’t going to lead to that level of debt, is it? Equally cancelling Sky wouldn’t have prevented the issue.
So what has he really spent the money on?

My thoughts exactly. This type of spending doesn't acumulate so much debt.

MissDoubleU · 13/05/2025 14:44

You chose a liar and deceptive, disloyal man and told him you wouldn’t accept lies. He has, of course, lied and deceived for his own personal gain as he always has.

Leave. He didn’t change back then and he won’t start to change now. You got what you knew he was, you just didn’t actually know that until now.

Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 13/05/2025 14:46

Snapncrackle · 13/05/2025 14:37

married 10 years
65k debt of which 12 k is his car
so 53k debt over 10 years is roughly £100 a week or 15 a day approx overspend

it’s a lot of money but £15 a day is a 2 coffee and a cake at costa

it won’t even get you 2 large McDonald meals😂

One nice meal out for 2 is easily £100
a trip to the cinema a-£50 -60

a day out to the beach inc petrol food ice creams and your looking at £100

But he’s clearly a liar and a cheat
so it’s up to you how you deal with it all

But he's earning. So those expenses would have to be on top of him spending ALL his salary, which still begs the question - what is he spending it all on?

OP, do not pay off his debt. You can, if you want to, support him to help him to work out a payment plan to pay off his OWN debt, but don't do it for him. He'll just run it up again because there's no bottom line. And he'll rationalise it in his own head. He's still not being honest with you, because I'm damn sure he's saying that he 'doesn't know' where it's all gone when he's got a very good idea where it's gone and he just wants more money to do the same again.

Littlebitpsycho · 13/05/2025 14:53

This is so completely not your problem. He's made his bed, let him lie in it. He needs to sort out a payment plan, while YOU need to wash your hands of it.

Get a divorce, he won't change. Plus he's still lying

MJxJones · 13/05/2025 14:53

What is his salary? After ten years are you sure the equity in the house wont be treated as a marital asset? Id be getting legal/financial adviae for myself before i was worried about him

Snapncrackle · 13/05/2025 14:54

Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 13/05/2025 14:46

But he's earning. So those expenses would have to be on top of him spending ALL his salary, which still begs the question - what is he spending it all on?

OP, do not pay off his debt. You can, if you want to, support him to help him to work out a payment plan to pay off his OWN debt, but don't do it for him. He'll just run it up again because there's no bottom line. And he'll rationalise it in his own head. He's still not being honest with you, because I'm damn sure he's saying that he 'doesn't know' where it's all gone when he's got a very good idea where it's gone and he just wants more money to do the same again.

we don’t know what the op or her husbands salary is
only the other day there was a thread where someone said they earned a good salary between them 70k and they were constantly told it’s not enough

but we don’t know what his salary is and op says he pays a lot of child support

he could easily be paying half of wages on Child support and still buying the kids clothes paying for phones tuition all sort of stuff then paying towards bills in the OP house as well and car insurance tax maintaining it
That could mean his salary is pretty much gone so
he is in debt from the credit cards / maybe loans which has been topping up his income

or he’s got another woman and spending the money on her hotel and champagne

Crikeyalmighty · 13/05/2025 14:55

Don’t pay off his debt OP - you may well end up divorced and have reduced any money due by splitting assets by paying off ‘his’ debt

hattie43 · 13/05/2025 14:55

If the debt is in his sole name and your finances are separate I’d let him get on with it . The whole basis of your relationship is based on lies so this is just another one .

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