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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:
MinorRSole · 13/05/2025 18:37

He doesn’t play online games does he? Some of those games have huge in app purchases and players spending £2k a week

Galatine · 13/05/2025 18:37

As MumsNet wisdom has it that, “if he’ll cheat with you, he’ll cheat on you”.
Absolutely true.

ChandrilanDiscoDroid · 13/05/2025 18:39

Galatine · 13/05/2025 18:37

As MumsNet wisdom has it that, “if he’ll cheat with you, he’ll cheat on you”.
Absolutely true.

There's one thing we know for sure about him now: when shit gets tough, he doesn't work on it or buckle down or pull together as a team. He lies and he evades and he finds a nice new cushy situation where a woman people still believe his lies.

TheSquashyHatofMrGnosspelius · 13/05/2025 18:47

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!

You need to immediately re-mortgage the house to pay the debt and then get divorced.

Carry on seeing him if you want but you need to be detached from him so you know what passes in your own life.

ByQuaintAzureWasp · 13/05/2025 18:48

He will likely be entitled to some of the house equity. At this point, given the circumstances, I would be getting a legal document drawn up for him to sign to state that he will not make any claim on tge house, now or in the future (post nup). Otherwise he'd be on his own with his debt.
You do realise you can help him pay his debts off then he can try to get part of your home.

MereNoelle · 13/05/2025 18:51

TheSquashyHatofMrGnosspelius · 13/05/2025 18:47

You need to immediately re-mortgage the house to pay the debt and then get divorced.

Carry on seeing him if you want but you need to be detached from him so you know what passes in your own life.

Why should the OP clear his debt with the equity in her house?

Crikeyalmighty · 13/05/2025 18:51

@Coggles7 well I for one don’t wish bad vibes on you - we can all have stuff in our past that in hindsight we really regret - that doesn’t mean you don’t deserve sympathy or support -

shuggles · 13/05/2025 18:52

@Coggles7 First thing to do is to review your spending. £45k is an excellent salary and £75k is a whopping salary, so there should be enough money for treats and luxuries.

However, there are some people (and you will see these people on this site) have "money dysmorphia" and are completely disconnected from reality, and have no concept of finances or mathematics. These are the people who claim to be "struggling" on colossal £100k+ salaries. So make sure your perception of your family's spending is actually aligned with reality.

If you review your spending and nothing is making sense in terms of monthly earnings and monthly spendings, then there is something that DH is hiding. Gambling or other secret spending. Otherwise, he's not earning that much.

Arctician · 13/05/2025 18:58

You’ve been taken for a mug. It’s legal advice you need, not financial advice. Hopefully the debt’s his not yours. Get rid.

Lighteningstrikes · 13/05/2025 19:01

I’m just gobsmacked on your behalf.

He’s on 70k per annum!! Has he got a very bad habit??

Do you realise over your 10 year marriage period, he has been overspending by approx. £550 per month.

He’s burning through it.

He doesn’t even acknowledge it as lying. I couldn’t respect an arsehole like that.

neopombear · 13/05/2025 19:03

Kick him, and his debt, out.

OhBow · 13/05/2025 19:06

Please take proper legal advice and find out what you'd both get in a divorce.

Ooo this is making me nervous on your behalf. He's going to drag you down with him (then possibly leave).

Protect yourself, and by extension your dc.

ByQuaintAzureWasp · 13/05/2025 19:09

I'd be checking that he's been paying into a private pension scheme too ... if he hasn't you are going to have a difficult retirement

Ladybird11 · 13/05/2025 19:13

Earning £70k, no housing or household costs.. Hard to see how spending on nice to haves has run up this debt. Are you sure there's been no gambling, or drugs?

Ladybird11 · 13/05/2025 19:14

He's been spending about £1000/week on something (taking salary and debt into account)

TheSquashyHatofMrGnosspelius · 13/05/2025 19:17

Because in reality, that is the only tidy way to do it. Because they are married, the debt will be half hers anyway. Re-mortaged and sorted, it's clean cut but she needs to crack on before he runs up further debt after.

There is no allocation of his debt and her debt, I agree with you he should be paying it off from whatever crummy bedsit be gets post separation but we all know life doesn't work like that.

Riaanna · 13/05/2025 19:18

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!

It is.

£6500 over ten years is actually only an over spend of £54 per month. The issue is if you can’t live within your means you build up debt quickly. And that debt needs to be repaid which then spirals. It’s a big debt but over ten years it’s easily explained and a common issue when credit allows.

MereNoelle · 13/05/2025 19:21

Riaanna · 13/05/2025 19:18

It is.

£6500 over ten years is actually only an over spend of £54 per month. The issue is if you can’t live within your means you build up debt quickly. And that debt needs to be repaid which then spirals. It’s a big debt but over ten years it’s easily explained and a common issue when credit allows.

It’s £65000, not £6500

JohnMajorsChicken · 13/05/2025 19:27

What a shock @Coggles7, I hope you're doing OK.
From my MN experience there's always something else... other women, drugs, gambling.... there's something going on and you'll have to dig deep to find out.

I couldn't stay with a man who put us in such debt, it's an unbelievable level of deceit.

JohnMajorsChicken · 13/05/2025 19:29

Riaanna · 13/05/2025 19:18

It is.

£6500 over ten years is actually only an over spend of £54 per month. The issue is if you can’t live within your means you build up debt quickly. And that debt needs to be repaid which then spirals. It’s a big debt but over ten years it’s easily explained and a common issue when credit allows.

Aside from the fact you're out by a factor of x10!! Do you think it's OK to let such a debt build up without telling your spouse?

Riaanna · 13/05/2025 19:33

JohnMajorsChicken · 13/05/2025 19:29

Aside from the fact you're out by a factor of x10!! Do you think it's OK to let such a debt build up without telling your spouse?

Still achievable over that timeframe.

I didn’t say it was acceptable. I said it’s possible. Start of with an overspend of £200 a month. That’s thousands over a year. Continue with that overspend plus interest and repayments. This is where you’re at.

Terribletwoss · 13/05/2025 19:36

I have some experience in this. Difference being there was no covering it up and no previous deception. Similar levels of debt and similar salaries, two children, able to repay in 24 months of hard work.

A lot think this type of debt has to include some sort of vice (gambling, drugs etc), but you’d be surprised. I went through every single statement in this case, it began as usual small credit card purchases (car repairs/new washing machine etc) but only minimum payments were made, debt grew with balance transfers and fees and interest, more debt was taken out to cover minimum payments which escalated again with fees, it was spread out over so many small loans and credit cards the gravity of it was completely not acknowledged. No financial savviness and a head in the sand. No ridiculous purchases, mostly slight lifestyle creep and insane fees due to stupidity. One difficult year when one had to take a reduced salary. The debt had started 6 or 7 years prior and built up slowly.

They did have to make huge sacrifices for 24 months, but it was repaid. They took out one loan each to pay everything else off, lower interest, no fees, and then overpaid every month. Of course, there had been no previous deception, so they trusted each other to take on the others debt.

MyrtlethePurpleTurtle · 13/05/2025 19:37

Coggles7 · 13/05/2025 14:03

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

Ignore the katty karma comment

BanditsWife · 13/05/2025 19:38

Are you sure he really has these debts? As in, you’ve seen actual evidence of them?

Because he is obviously a treacherous bastard, so I wouldn’t discount the fact that he may be making them up for another reason? Maybe to avoid ending his good thing of you paying all household bills?

If you have seen evidence, then how did he run them up? Because that seems like a lot for a man earning £70k and no bills to manage to run up on meals and holidays.

But maybe he doesn’t even earn £70k? There is no way you can trust a thing he’s ever said to you.

Stravaig · 13/05/2025 19:44

Before you immerse yourself in dealing with his debt, or reviewing the viability of your marriage, first things first. You need professional legal advice to fully understand the financial implications for you of his debts; and of divorce.

Which country are you in, and how/did you safeguard your existing assets (eg. your house) before getting married?