Sometimes, one honest conversation about money can leave you questioning everything.
Take Ashley, for example. At 34, she’s been busy planning her dream wedding, assuming she was walking into marriage on pretty solid financial ground. She’d spent years throwing every extra dollar at her student loans and finally paid them off. No credit card balances. No monthly debt payments.
However, her fiancé, Casey, is in a very different spot. At 31, he’s carrying about $23,000 in credit card debt and another $24,000 in student loans. Although he’s chipping away at both balances, they’re not disappearing anytime soon.
At Ashley’s insistence, the two recently sat down for what was supposed to be a simple pre-wedding money talk. Instead, Ashley walked away more anxious than reassured.
What marriage actually does to your debt
One of the biggest traps couples fall into when planning a wedding is thinking that those “I dos” automatically merge everything — including debt. But that’s not usually how it works.
Legally, your debt is your debt. If you are entering a marriage with student loans or a maxed-out credit card, those balances stay tied to you, and your partner doesn’t suddenly inherit them just because you’ve exchanged vows.
There are really only two ways that line gets blurred. The first is if you live in one of the nine community property states, like California or Texas. While pre-marriage debt usually stays separate, debt taken on after the wedding can become shared, no matter whose name is on the account.
The second is co-signing. If your partner signs onto a loan or becomes a joint account holder, they’ve officially taken on responsibility for that debt too.
But even if your partner isn’t legally responsible for your payments, the real problem isn’t legal — it’s practical.
Let’s say one person is throwing $500 a month at high-interest credit cards or student loans. That’s $500 not going toward rent, groceries, travel, or building savings together.
This scenario is becoming increasingly more common, considering Americans are currently buried under roughly $1.8 trillion in student loan debt alone. It’s no surprise, then, that nearly one in four married couples now choose to keep separate bank accounts to maintain some financial independence.
How this plays out day-to-day depends on the debt itself. Credit card debt tends to feel the most urgent, with high interest rates and payments that can quickly eat into whatever breathing room is left in the monthly budget.
Student loans, on the other hand, are highly structured and predictable — but they can stick around for years, quietly slowing other financial goals.
Ashley won’t get collection calls for Casey’s past debt. But if they’re building a life together, those balances could still shape the timeline for things like buying a home, traveling, or saving for retirement.
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The reality of “I do”
Once you get past the legal fine print, you need to figure out how to merge your financial lives without driving each other crazy.
For Ashley and Casey, the issue isn’t just who technically owns the debt. It’s what that debt means for everyday life. Does Casey’s repayment plan become something they tackle together? Or does he handle it on his own while Ashley focuses on building savings?
There is no perfect, one-size-fits-all playbook here. Most couples end up landing somewhere in the middle, usually choosing one of three paths.
Some choose to take a team approach and pool every dollar and aggressively pay it down together, while others continue on the path of total separation — his debt, her debt, and shared bills split down the middle. There’s also the hybrid system of “yours, mine, and ours.” Essentially, one joint account for shared expenses with everything else kept separate.
Ultimately, it comes down to transparency and trust. Money is one of the biggest friction points in relationships. In fact, a CFP Board survey found that 57% of Americans in relationships say money has caused major stress or conflict.
For Ashley and Casey, having a plan now is far better than figuring it out mid-argument later. Deciding right now how much goes to debt versus savings — and deciding if a house or a vacation comes first — prevents resentment from eroding the relationship later.
The couples who succeed at this tend to set up monthly or quarterly financial check-ins to tweak the plan as balances shrink and incomes change.
What Ashley and Casey are feeling is incredibly common. Combining two financial lives is rarely seamless. But it’s possible to move forward as partners without letting debt call the shots.
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Laura Grande is a freelance contributor with nearly 15 years of industry experience. Throughout her career she's written about and edited a range of topics, from personal finance and politics to health and pop culture.
