For the first half of our marriage, my husband and I kept our finances separate. After a big move, I couldn't keep up. Combining our money helped.
Working in tech, she quickly made more money than her husband. Eventually, he told her he was jealous of her breadwinner status and felt like they weren't a team.
Becoming a DINK — someone in a double-income household with no kids — changed Joey Hadden's lifestyle in NYC, which you can see in photos.
Mina and Joe Coleman have always shared finances evenly. They've paid off $350,000 of debt by selling properties and lived on a boat to save money.
A woman shares expenses proportionally her fiance to their income levels after moving in together to care for their child cost her money.
Her prenup didn't protect her when she got divorced, but she still thinks they're important and wouldn't get married again without one.
A mom of two in a relationship with her husband and her boyfriend purposely creates financial attachment across their poly ''vee.''