Newlyweds find love, money can mix


Experts recommend couples talk seriously about money before they marry.

NEW YORK (AP) — When she was single, Nicole Bradshaw Jackson didn’t put a lot of thought into her spending decisions.

“It’s your money, and you get used to spending it the way you want,” said Jackson, a 31-year-old health communications specialist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

That has changed since she and Jarvis Jackson, 34, an information technology project manager at the CDC, said “I do” last October.

It’s not just that Jarvis Jackson is a saver, which he acknowledges he is. Or that he opposes her spending, which he doesn’t.

“We’ve talked a lot about this, because now we have financial goals we want to achieve,” he said. “We need to do it together.”

One of the hardest things couples must do is merge their often-differing ideas about money — and, experts say, the sooner they do it, the better. Those who don’t often end up in hurtful battles over unresolved financial issues or in fights so nasty they lead to divorce court.

Timothy J. Maurer, a certified financial planner in Baltimore, said couples need to realize early in a relationship that when they start talking about money, what comes out often isn’t about money.

“When two people come together, they come with baggage — the psychological aspect of money,” said Maurer.

He said, for example, that both he and his wife Andrea grew up in homes that didn’t have a lot of money. But his father, an electrical engineer, was very analytical and a bit of a penny-pincher, while his wife’s father, a doctor, was open-minded about a lot of things, including money.

“So our expectations and the values about money that we brought into our married life were different,” he said. “That had to be reconciled.”

In some cases, a person’s feelings about money can be very negative, colored by memories of parents fighting over money or misusing the family’s money, he added. And what makes one person happy, say opening a savings account, may not mean the same thing to a mate.

Maurer suggests couples begin their talks by creating a “personal money story” in which they think about memorable money moments in their lives and rate them on a scale ranging from minus 10 to plus 10. The results can be the basis for a money talk.

“And knowing that none of us are ever going to be perfect, that gives us some grace for ourselves and our spouses,” he said.

The Jacksons said they had their first serious money talk before they were married. A pre-marriage counseling program though their church touched on finances, but they wanted more.

“So one weekend, for two days, we hammered out our goals,” Nicole remembered. “We looked at what I considered ‘necessities’ and what he considered ’necessities,’ and credit and normal ranges for spending. It wasn’t that pleasant, but it was worth it.”

In the end, the couple decided to use three accounts — his, hers and ours.

“There’s stuff we have to buy — you’ve gotta have rent, pay your utilities, have gas for your car,” Jarvis said. “That comes out of our account.”

The separate accounts are to fund their individual needs. Or, as he put it: “She can get her hair done, and I can go bowling twice a week with no pain.”

Amanda and Jason Tirotta, both 28, of Ashtabula, Ohio, got married last July and have had to combine very different money styles.

Amanda, a branch manager for a credit union, describes herself as “a budgeter by nature.” She saved the money for a down payment and bought the home the couple now shares.

“I knew how much my gas would be, my electric bill, all the other expenses,” she said. In fact, she’s a big fan of spreadsheets.

Jason, on the other hand, is not the type to sit down and balance the checkbook, though as a bachelor he always had a good grasp of the approximate balance in his account “and never bounced a check.”

And while Amanda would put all extra dollars into savings, Jason believes that “if you have some money, and can afford to get something you want, go get it.”