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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:
HerNeighbourTotoro · 13/05/2025 17:34

His ex is probably laughing to herself she got rid of a dick like that, but at least he found someone naive to take him in.

Gettingbysomehow · 13/05/2025 17:39

That would be the end of the marriage for me. He is totally untrustworthy.

StressedLP1 · 13/05/2025 17:52

The debt’s probably the tip of the iceberg given his track record of deceit although presumably you already know that.

ProudSquid · 13/05/2025 17:58

He's having an affair

butterfly0404 · 13/05/2025 18:01

Coke habit probably.
He's been living a high old life whilst you pay the bills, literally.

Get legal advice about divorce, as you're married it's all in the pot, assets and debts.

treesandsun · 13/05/2025 18:02

You married a liar and he has continued to be a liar - some by omission and some not. The house is in your name and sounds like you are clear there. I would let him sort the debt himself- with a debt advisor and I would not in anyway bail him out - not for the debt itself but for the lying. He will continue to lie as this is who he is -so choose if this is what you want to live with.

thedeadneverdie · 13/05/2025 18:07

You had an affair and expect a stand up good honest guy? You got what you paid for. Hope he is worth 65k!

SunnyDaysT · 13/05/2025 18:10

Yes OP, I hate to say it but you married a blatant cheat. Children are only teenagers now and you are married 10 plus years which meant there were very very young when he started cheating. What really did you expect?

FeedingPidgeons · 13/05/2025 18:10

You need to file for divorce now and engage a shit hot lawyer who will persuade the judge that his debts don't count towards the assets to be divided.

Do not take on the burden of trying to help sort it out, he hasn't even told you where it's gone. All that will happen is he does it again.

AthWat · 13/05/2025 18:10

."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... "

So not someone you had any idea might be prone to self centred and haphazard behaviour then?

Lassango · 13/05/2025 18:14

Is anybody stupid enough to accumulate £65k of debt outside of an addition?
Do you suspect drugs or gambling?

OneFunBrickNewt · 13/05/2025 18:15

MyKingdomForACat · 13/05/2025 13:53

You call it debt. I’d call it karma

What a mean and unhepful comment.

tommyhoundmum · 13/05/2025 18:17

Coggles7 · 13/05/2025 14:04

Thank you. This is my feeling too. I don’t see how that level of debt is possible without something he’s still not telling me!

Is he a gambler?

GarlicPile · 13/05/2025 18:17

I think you can easily run up £65k credit on 'nothing in particular' over ten years. There's usually a thread on here from somebody wondering how their neighbours, in similar middle-income families, manage to live much better lifestyles. The answers are, correctly, parental funds and/or credit.

I used to earn approx £95k in today's money. Like most of my friends & colleagues, I had large credit card accounts. It didn't go on flash cars, gold-plated holidays or drugs. I had very good shoes and hair, expensively-maintained skin and wore Joseph. All my food was organic. My social life revolved around City bars and good restaurants.

What I was doing felt normal and reasonable, but it was an edge game. As there's no money in my birth family, I only needed one thing to go wrong and I'd be using one credit card to pay the others. For me, something did go wrong and then another until there was no way out. For others, though, the game works as expected. Their earnings keep up with their spending and their neighbours post sad threads on Mumsnet!

@Coggles7 seems to have married an individualist who takes opportunities as they arise, lives for today and hopes for tomorrow. I bet he's fun to be around? The problem is whether you want to be with someone who's such an individualist that he doesn't feel his affairs concern you, who's insouciant about the future and who would probably hop off on a new adventure if one presents itself.

Up to you, but it'll be quite interesting to see how your thoughts develop.

GarlicPile · 13/05/2025 18:19

AthWat · 13/05/2025 18:10

."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... "

So not someone you had any idea might be prone to self centred and haphazard behaviour then?

You said it so much more succinctly 😂✅

bowchicawowwow · 13/05/2025 18:19

I wouldn’t consider an IVA if you can avoid it. Regardless of marital status or who is responsible for the debt, the IVA company take into account the whole household income when calculating the repayment, so you end up paying for their debt either way. I’d look at getting all the info and getting him to tackle the debt with the highest interest first and quickly. Out of his own money, not yours. Then onto the next one. Once he is clear of debt, there is a usually a short window of opportunity before they slip back into bad habits and that’s your moment to divorce.

scotstars · 13/05/2025 18:20

I find it hard to understand how someone on that salary could rack up that amount of debt even paying maintenance. Does he pay anything towards the household bills in your house? I don't think I could get past this level of deception I'd want to see statements for several years to see where the money went living beyond means, drugs, an affair, gambling could all be possibilities

LaaLaaLady · 13/05/2025 18:24

MyKingdomForACat · 13/05/2025 13:53

You call it debt. I’d call it karma

Douche bag response

PinkyFlamingo · 13/05/2025 18:27

DwayneTheRockJohnson · 13/05/2025 15:15

You married a cheater 👏 👏 👏 I hope his ex-wife is laughing at you both. I would be.

Exactly. To choose to start a relationship with a married man shows you have never been on tne receiving end of such deception and betrayal. And never had to experience the emotional pain and devastation of this.

PinkyFlamingo · 13/05/2025 18:28

LaaLaaLady · 13/05/2025 18:24

Douche bag response

Nope. Woman chooses to have an affair with a married man and then is shocked when he lies to her.

dementedmummy · 13/05/2025 18:32

Coggles7 · 13/05/2025 15:13

None together. 2 who are mine. The youngest sees him as a dad. I’m heartbroken for her.

He can be a crap husband but a good dad - the two are not mutually exclusive. If you don't have a whole pile of things as evidence of his spending, he is either gambling or has another affair piece going on. I'm going to go against Dave Ramsay advice and say this is not your financial problem to sort if he cannot understand why you are upset. If you don't have joint finances or debt, keep it that way. If you decide to divorce then make sure your lawyer knows why as he can have effectively spent £65k of what he may be entitled too from you (if there's anything). Good luck x

andthat · 13/05/2025 18:32

Coggles7 · 13/05/2025 14:03

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

You really don’t @Coggles7

Velmy · 13/05/2025 18:33

But I thought I’d made it clear I hate lying.

I mean, if you'd made it clear...

sakuraspring · 13/05/2025 18:34

I.would be very suspicious how he ran up that level of debt. I would want to see all the statements.

I would also be astonished if someone who has already had two affairs remained faithful for ten years.

Finally, if you have been married that long, you need urgent legal advice. The fact it is "his" debt and "your" house may well be academic when it comes to divorce. I would speak to a lawyer and get clarity on that whatever you ultimately decide to do

DoYouReally · 13/05/2025 18:35

Used to work in debt recovery.

If he was my husband:

  • zero change of me remortgaging/clear his debt
  • I would want to know and see evidence of all of the following
  • How? I suspect he didn't declare the child maintenence as part of his out goings on the applications form.
  • I would need to see all credit card/loan statements (if he doesn't have them, his lender can re-issue them for all least the number of years
  • Current a/c statements too
  • I would want to know where his money is going because someone of £70k with no rent/mortgage shouldn't have this problem- where is his money going?
  • If no addictions/gambling/large unexplained cash withdrawals, only them could I satisfy myself that he's stupid rather than a liar? (Neither are attractive but stupid is more tolerable)
  • I would need to be satisfied the only cause is stupidity/overspend (No extra children/women being paid for etc)
  • I would need to see his work out plan/debt reduction/solution. He needs to get a consolidation loan or a budget to clear the debt and stick to it?
  • I would need to see every single financial statement monthly to ensure he sticks to it

One mess up and I'd have him turfed out in his ear with new accommodation costs to fund and the divorce papers would be filed too.

Don't help him by paying anything off. If you do, there's no chance of him becoming financially disciplined.