Money Matters
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how to get DH on board with budgets
So, I'm having a tough time budgeting with my DH. All within the last month or so, we paid off our debt, got reasonable cars for our family. We met with our financial planner and got set up to hit retirement goals, so now we are saving the right amount to hit those goals. The next goal is we want to sell our house and buy a new one this fall while interest rates are low and house prices are reasonable. It'll be tight for awhile until he or I get another job that makes more, we'll only be able to put like $150 into our normal savings per month after all bills are paid. (We do have a large e-fund though). And if we want another kid down the road, we'll definitely have to be making more. But that's not for a few years. If something happened though, we could push money around and be ok even with a bigger mortgage payment. So the issue is, he doesn't want to be part of this budget process. I try to talk to him about the budget and he gets angry. He wants to spend more on a house with the idea that he'll be making more eventually. Um.. it doesn't work that way! We get a house we can afford NOW and when we make more, that money goes to savings, another child, etc. I'm turning into the bad guy because I'm only looking at houses that are in our budget that aren't going to cost a ton to maintain. Even though there are plenty of good houses out there that would work for us, he's not happy because it's not the perfect house. But we don't make enough to have our dream house at the moment, but most anything would work longer term for us than what we have now. Have any of you dealt with this? If so, how did you handle it? Did you just force them to sit down with you weekly, monthly? (We are in therapy about communication issues, so I'm working at it...)
Re: how to get DH on board with budgets
I am with you. I wouldn't buy a house based on income you may make in the future. Too many things can happen and you may not get raises for several years. Yeah, it's not likely, but it can happen. And then you would be house poor and not able to do other things you want, potentially including having a kid when you wanted.
What if you guys talked to the financial advisor about the home purchase? I would imagine that he or she would recommend that you only buy a house you can comfortably afford now? Would DH be more willing to listen to the expert?
Good luck!
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This. Realistically, how long do you think it will take him to find a new job? The job market is really good right now.... it only took me 2-3 months. Even if it takes 6 months, interest rates should still be pretty good then.
Something else to point out to him is it is this kind of reasoning that is partially to blame for the housing market collapse we had in this country a few years ago.
"It's okay I buy my house with an interest-only loan and five year balloon payment...because just think of how much the house will appreciate and how much more money I'll be making 5 years from now. Yay!" " If I wait to buy later when I could actually afford it, house prices will just get higher and I'll lose out on that equity. Must buy now." Nnnooooooooooooo.
I think your "gap" in perceived budget is too wide for this, but if it was something like $1000 or $2000 you may try to communicate to H in terms of opportunity costs. Something such as "I would feel comfortable if we increased the house budget by $2,000 but only if we agreed that buying a house for that total means no more hockey tickets and getting rid of cable."