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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:
TheHerboriste · 13/05/2025 15:26

BearyNiceEars · 13/05/2025 14:04

My understanding (people correct me if I’m wrong) is that if the debt is in his sole name the debt is with the person, so it’s entirely his issue. He kept you out as it built up, so he can solve it himself now. I don’t see why you are organising the financial advice when it’s not your burden to carry.

He has options, bankruptcy, debt management etc… it’s doable, but his to do!

Take some time to assess how this impacts your relationship, I would never trust someone again after something like this as essentially, you have been lied to for years.

Yes, this is correct. If you didn't co-sign the debt is his alone to deal with. Looks like he'll need to get a second job.

BestDIL · 13/05/2025 15:27

Why would you remortgage your house? To pay off HIS debt? What happens when the next floozy comes along. He buggers off leaving you with a wacking great mortgage that YOU will have to pay off. DO NOT REMORTGAGE FOR THE LOSER!

MJxJones · 13/05/2025 15:28

I hope you're not referring to me. I understand the debts arent in her name. Im talking about the assets they share as a married couple with a marriage over 10 years

MJxJones · 13/05/2025 15:29

MJxJones · 13/05/2025 15:28

I hope you're not referring to me. I understand the debts arent in her name. Im talking about the assets they share as a married couple with a marriage over 10 years

Sorry that was at Tallulahbetty

historyrepeatz · 13/05/2025 15:32

Have you got some professional advice regarding your financial set up? As you are married doesn’t he have a claim on your home regardless of whose name the property and / or mortgage it’s in. You want to make sure you and your kids are as protected as possible. Ask him for bank statements going back as long as you have been together so you can piece things together yourself and not have to rely on his word. Also as for his credit report. It will tell you a lot of he’s not prepared to be transparent in this way. You would be amazed at the kind of debt that can be built up just living beyond your means without big obvious reasons such as gambling.

Hwi · 13/05/2025 15:32

Karma?

Profhilodisaster · 13/05/2025 15:33

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.

You're not going to remortgage to pay off his debts are you?

Gundogday · 13/05/2025 15:34

What a shock! It did sound like you didn’t rush into the marriage, waiting two years, and were hoping that he had changed his spots. I get why people are saying the karma comments, but that’s not really helpful, and the past is the past, and now you have to move forward.

Don’t offer to pay his debt. It won’t stop him. Instead , get hold if bank statements, credit card statements and see what the money has been spent on. Is it so thing innocent like holidays and costs coffee, or more sinister - drugs, gambling, women etc. the former you be able to forgive, the latter, not.

Although I would ltb for the lying and deception. £65 k is a serious amount if debt!

Azureshores · 13/05/2025 15:35

Will OP's house be protected bc it's in her name if they split? I thought marriage meant you have a claim on assets? Tread carefully Op.

Have you told him you want to see statements/receipts of what this money has been spent on?

RawBloomers · 13/05/2025 15:37

Over 10 years, £65K is only about £100 a week. While that’s obviously £100 a week too much if it’s not within your budget, it’s the sort of thing that can be easily achieved with trips to Costa and a meal out or take aways. Or putting a family holiday on a credit card each year. It doesn’t have to be a matter of women/gambling/drugs.

I think you need to find out where the money has actually gone. Go through his spending with him for the last 6 months and see what’s really happened. If this is down to a life style that’s a bit over what you can all afford, You may be able to cut back for a short time and pay off the debt soon enough to still retire as you planned. You’d still need to decide if a man who is so bad with money and won’t share that sort of information with you is someone you want to stay with.

Namechangean · 13/05/2025 15:39

Coggles7 · 13/05/2025 14:03

Yes I feel like I deserve the karma comments, thanks.

it’s not really an affair if you met and didn’t start a relationship until he left his wife. People are allowed to end their relationships, it’s not like you carried on behind her back for months/years so hardly karma to you.

However, he is a known liar, as he has cheated before.

Honestly the debt is in his name, the mortgage is yours. Get some legal advice as you might be able to leave this marriage in a good position. Get rid of him and his debt and his lies

Namechangean · 13/05/2025 15:40

Azureshores · 13/05/2025 15:35

Will OP's house be protected bc it's in her name if they split? I thought marriage meant you have a claim on assets? Tread carefully Op.

Have you told him you want to see statements/receipts of what this money has been spent on?

Not unless he has been paying in to the mortgage or are purchased it after they married. People tend to be able to leave with their pre-marital assets

TallulahBetty · 13/05/2025 15:40

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.

No. No, no, no.

OnGoldenPond · 13/05/2025 15:41

MounjaroMounjaro · 13/05/2025 14:02

I can't tell you how quickly I'd go off someone who did this to me! He's not a trustworthy many, OP. He's been unfaithful at least twice. He can't explain what he's spent his money on - it doesn't take a lot to figure out he's been spending money on something he knows you wouldn't approve of. Women, drugs, gambling - one of those is my bet.

Yep quite agree. To have run up those kind of debts when he has no major household expenses to pay and has a decent salary it’s got to be drugs, gambling or an expensive mistress. All of those require immediate dumping as he will not change.

Profhilodisaster · 13/05/2025 15:41

RawBloomers · 13/05/2025 15:37

Over 10 years, £65K is only about £100 a week. While that’s obviously £100 a week too much if it’s not within your budget, it’s the sort of thing that can be easily achieved with trips to Costa and a meal out or take aways. Or putting a family holiday on a credit card each year. It doesn’t have to be a matter of women/gambling/drugs.

I think you need to find out where the money has actually gone. Go through his spending with him for the last 6 months and see what’s really happened. If this is down to a life style that’s a bit over what you can all afford, You may be able to cut back for a short time and pay off the debt soon enough to still retire as you planned. You’d still need to decide if a man who is so bad with money and won’t share that sort of information with you is someone you want to stay with.

He takes home £4200 a month, he's done some serious overspending .

GarlicPile · 13/05/2025 15:41

While marital assets will be split in a divorce, I think I'm right in saying that financial inequities between the spouses are taken into consideration. As your children live with you but (presumably) his ex is the primary carer for his, your children's need for the home is greater. He earns a lot more than you but doesn't seem to be contributing fairly to the household.

ETA: PPs have reminded me that the home was your asset before you got married. That helps!

Add in the fact that he's unilaterally spent ~£50k without your knowledge, it could be argued that this is evidence he never did see you as a joint enterprise.

Although I'm now wondering if he sees a divorce on the horizon and has been borrowing against any settlement?

indianques · 13/05/2025 15:44

CowTown · 13/05/2025 15:09

Did she sign a prenup though? It may well be a marital asset in the eyes of the law now.

Ex Mortgage Debt Recovery Manager here.

The Bank cannot go after the Ops house, for any of the debts that the DH has accrued. The house is not his asset. They could seek to now get security to back the debt, but after getting a CCJ, they could only go after assets in his name, for eg. the £12k car. I highly doubt that the debt is all in one place - I would imagine he has 5-8 lenders, all with balances of £10k and under. Also, he will have lied on applications about the amount of debt he's already in.

If Op and her DH divorced, then the houses value might be taken into account when the separation agreement is being drawn up, however, in no circumstances can any of her DH's lenders pursue the Op or any of her assets to repay his debt You just can't do it!

I should add, that if the Op is in Scotland, the rules differ, and in the case of a divorce the Op would keep the whole house, and there would be no recompense to the DH for it's value.

People seem to get very confused about this!

How he has amassed such debt when he doesn't even pay half the bills is beyond me, even with the CM payments. He may have very expensive hobbies or spend money on a lot of shit? My neighbour is like this - at least 3 parcels turn up every day.

MereNoelle · 13/05/2025 15:45

RawBloomers · 13/05/2025 15:37

Over 10 years, £65K is only about £100 a week. While that’s obviously £100 a week too much if it’s not within your budget, it’s the sort of thing that can be easily achieved with trips to Costa and a meal out or take aways. Or putting a family holiday on a credit card each year. It doesn’t have to be a matter of women/gambling/drugs.

I think you need to find out where the money has actually gone. Go through his spending with him for the last 6 months and see what’s really happened. If this is down to a life style that’s a bit over what you can all afford, You may be able to cut back for a short time and pay off the debt soon enough to still retire as you planned. You’d still need to decide if a man who is so bad with money and won’t share that sort of information with you is someone you want to stay with.

It’s £100 a week on top of his £75k salary though. He should be able to afford trips to Costa and takeaways on his salary, especially as he has no housing costs. £75k is over £4k a month.

Namechangean · 13/05/2025 15:46

also he has no assets, apart from his car, so he can look in to IVAs or bankruptcy. DO NOT take on any of the financial burden for his debts. IVAS only last 5 years and so it can be a tight 5 years and then he will be debt free and you can just continue as you are. If you decide to stay. I wouldn’t

historyrepeatz · 13/05/2025 15:48

If you are going to stay and try and help him through this try to do it from his finances only. You and your children shouldn’t suffer the consequences. He has a good income. He needs a debt plan and budget based on his income. You shouldn’t pay for anything for him directly or cover any of his expenses as it’s the same thing eg he still needs to contribute to the food he eats in your home etc.

Have you got a Will or updated one since marriage? If not you really need some advice on what happens to your assets upon a split and after death.

Dweetfidilove · 13/05/2025 15:52

I don't understand your karma or claim to have had an affair 😕.
According to MN wisdom - he ended the relationship with his wife before you started one yourself. That's not cheating, is it?

You were awate he was dishonest though, as he had in fact cheated before.
It seems deception is his MO, so you need some legal advice as to how to disentangle from him before he sinks your ship ☹️.
That is a huge debt.

Dreichweather · 13/05/2025 15:52

He is a liar so you can’t trust him.

What does he say about where the money has gone?

Resilience · 13/05/2025 15:53

Ok, let’s take away the element of karma and morality etc which is unhelpful at this stage. What I’d be more concerned about is his complete inability to face up to reality and take action. £65k of debt has taken years to compile. Years that he’s made no attempt to get on top of the situation either with you or without you. And now you know, it’s you who is trying to find a solution, not him.

He is a complete and utter man child. He’s proven that he cannot be relied upon to take control of a bad situation and support you should you ever need it because he can’t even sort himself out. And that’s before you start considering his ability for subterfuge by hiding this from you for so long.

I’d definitely be considering divorce. Don’t get sucked into the sunk costs fallacy here. Your spouse should be your life partner, not a liability. Yes that means for richer or poorer but what’s usually meant by that is after a foundation of trust, loyalty and mutual support has been established and then hard times befall you. You sadly haven’t ever had that.

Horrible situation and I wish you luck finding a way through.

ThejoyofNC · 13/05/2025 15:53

So just to be clear, you're surprised that a man with a history of lies and deception has lied and been deceitful?

OneTaupeTraybake · 13/05/2025 15:56

OP you haven't done anything wrong.
You told him within 3 weeks you weren't getting involved in an affair - you ended it as as soon as you found out, I guess?

The only thing you've done wrong is, is trust this man.
Don't help him pay the debt off.
Ask him to leave.
You'll be taking away from your children by helping him out by clearing this debt.

No man is worth a mortgage free home and money in the bank for your own kids.

If you're not married ask him to leave asap.
If you are, divorce.

You will regret staying with him.

No shame in admitting you made a mistake, him.

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