The Great Debate: Joint or Separate Bank Accounts?

24 Aug 2010 by davidlpatrick, 7 Comments »

This is a guest post by Dustin Reichmann from EngagedMarriage.com. 

The Great Debate: Joint or Separate Bank Accounts?

Do you and your spouse use a single, joint checking account? Or do you choose to keep separate bank accounts? Have you considered the alternatives?

The debate between joint and separate bank accounts has waged for months at Engaged Marriage, and I’ve been surprised by some of the reasons given for each approach. However, I was really shocked at the emotional reaction that many have in defending the structure of their family finances.

It turns out that people can be pretty passionate about their choice of bank accounts! I have loved the many conversations with readers, and as I have taken some time to think about the issue a little more, I’ve opened my mind a bit.

I thought it would be useful to outline the main reasons why a married couple may choose a single joint account vs. separate accounts. And then, for the really important part of this exercise, we’ll take a look at why this decision should matter to you and your spouse.

Reasons Why a Joint Bank Account is Best

  • Encourages regular communication about finances
  • Built-in accountability partner on spending matters
  • Fosters unity in money matters
  • Strong sense of working together to meet financial goals
  • Clear that all household income is treated as “our” money
  • No conflict or administrative work in “splitting up the bills”
  • Dave Ramsey says this is best, and we all love Dave, right?

Reasons Why Separate or “Yours, Mine and Ours” Bank Accounts Rule

  • Duties of financial bookkeeping not solely on one person
  • Clear boundaries set up-front for individual spending
  • May be easier to track specific savings goals
  • Easy to surprise your spouse with gifts
  • No need to talk about finances regularly
  • Each spouse can keep “their proportionate amount” of household income
  • Ability to maintain privacy about what you spend money on
  • More independence and autonomy to spend as desired without seeking concurrence

So, who is really right?

After reading a lot about this issue and reflecting upon it, I have divined the one, true and infallible answer to this age-old question:

It depends.

You will notice that the reasons I listed in support of separate accounts are broken into two groups. In my opinion, the “black” group are legitimate and healthy reasons for having multiple accounts. However, the “red” group spells trouble.

The reasons listed in red are centered in a mentality of not just separate accounts, but separate finances within the marriage. I feel strongly that this is a dangerous and unhealthy foundation for money management for a married couple. These reasons come from a spirit of selfishness, and they do not reflect the fact that marriage is a partnership. And they certainly do not support open communication and trust.

The Key is Intent

Personally, my wife and I use a single, joint checking account and feel that is absolutely perfect for us. And before I gave this much thought, I would have prescribed this same arrangement for every married couple. Actually, I still think this is the way to go, but I can see where other approaches can work fine, too.

The main reason that we choose to keep a joint bank account is our belief in unity. We believe that when you get married, you become one, and money is a key area where this is lived out. There is no “yours, mine and ours” but only “ours.” When you handle your money together, you are agreeing on your hopes, dreams and goals together. The use of a single joint account also encourages (requires, really) open communication about your finances, which is absolutely critical to a successful marriage.

As long as the right intent is there, I think you also operate in full unity with multiple accounts. I don’t think it provides as accommodating of environment for unity and open communication, but I fully believe many couples lead happy, healthy and successful financial lives together under this arrangement.

Plus, we feel it is just easier to manage when everything goes into one account and out of the same account. For us, it’s the simpler solution to maintain a single checking account.

I realize that some couples find the simplicity of their money management to actually be enhanced by using multiple accounts. And, while that’s not our deal, I can certainly understand and respect that. In fact, we have several different savings accounts for this same reason.

The Bottom Line

In my opinion, the real question to ask here is not how many accounts you have or what you call them. The key is to operate your finances in a unified way with open communication at all times.

You can do that with one account or twenty. However, if you do operate with multiple accounts, they should all be “joint” accounts that you both can access, and there should be absolutely no secrets about how money is being earned or spent.

And remember that your motivation should be one of unity. That will keep you in the black and out of the red in more ways than one.

So, I just have to know:

Do you and your spouse use a single joint checking account or do you choose to keep separate accounts? Why?

____________________________

Dustin Riechmann created Engaged Marriage as a source of advice for a happy marriage for those willing to do something about it.

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Do you and your spouse use a single joint checking account or do you choose to keep separate accounts? Why? (Your comment below is worth 1 entry in the contest. Details here)


 

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  • http://bondchristian.com/ bondChristian

    Ha! Caught myself judging too quickly again. Before I considered this much just now, I would have said single… definitely. But as you said, I can see the other said too. Thanks for pointing it out.

    Good guest post.

    -Marshall Jones Jr.

  • http://www.christianfamiyplaning.net Stephanie

    We have joint accounts, though we choose to keep track of extra income (ie, not salary) we bring in separately, and we CAN choose to do with it what we want. Sometimes that leads to strain, sometimes it’s really good!

    Right now it doesn’t make sense for us to have separate accounts even if we wanted to, since I’m a SAHW.

  • http://janetdillonrobinson.blogspot.com Janet Robinson

    Oh wow.. To see the reasons outlined that way is so helpful. We have separate accounts but am now seriously considering making a joint account. I like Stephanie’s idea of a joint account for salary and separate accounts for extra income. Thanks for the great insight guys!

  • davidlpatrick

    We also have a House account where both of our incomes are routed into and everything is paid from that account, including savings, bills, etc. We each have our own separate accounts as well which we allow each other some discretionary income (spending money) where we don’t check with each other on how that money is spent.

    Imagine how hard it is to plan a special date night or buy your spouse a surprise gift from the master account. No surprises there!

  • Tee

    We too have joint accounts and have had from the beginning. It didn’t work out quite as well in the beginning of the marriage because my spouse did not understand he concept of you must tell me when you use it if you are not the manager. It took a lot of bumps in the road to get that one across but finally things are working out great in that area.

    I also agree with the planning surprises…doesn’t really work out well when one person manages and wants to know where everything is going. The separate spending works out great for that. Each person will be allotted a certain amount which we both know that amount and where it goes from there only that person know.

    Still enjoying all the great information. Keep’em coming!

  • Cleveland Brown Bride

    I was always open to yours, mine and ours because our money habits are SO different *he’s the saver, I’m the spender*. I explained it to him this way: the “our” money goes for house, bills, insurance, etc. The yours and mine accounts will be for our own discretionary spending; i.e., I dont have to account for money I spend and vice versa. This way was a good compromise for us: he got to see where the majority of the money was going and still feel like he was in control of it, I was still able to spend and didn’t have to answer for all my (to his eyes) silly purchases; if both people are working, both should be able to splurge, within reason, of course.

  • http://janetdillonrobinson.blogspot.com Janet Robinson

    Yours, mine and ours – I like it!

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