Hi everyone,
Thank you all for the replies, it is much much appreciated and insightful.
You are overthinking this. Just split the whole mortgage payment 25/75.
Yes, I fully agree with you, I'm clearly doing so and now plan on not thinking about this for a second going forward - mortgages are common expenses and should be split using the same ratios as other common/joint expenses.
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Using Kmp2's post to add more clarity to the situation and cover certain topics that came up in some replies:
I'm with Malcat, have you asked your SO what she thinks yet? Is this question just about ironing out mortgage details or getting some ideas to go into a first pass discussion with her?
Because please don't go into a first discussion with her, with all the details all ready.
We are starting to discuss the details of how our finances will look like during her mat leave and have pretty open conversations about it. I really don't want her to stress about any of this, I'm already the one taking care of our couple's finances but I want her to fully understand how we're going to approach this so she 100% agrees with the approach and feels comfortable about it. the goal is to be 100% fair taking into account all circumstances (physical/mental toll of the pregnancy, salary reduction, etc.).
I'm not sure what expenses you split 50/50 right now (ie what's a personal expense and what's a joint expense) - because of what your personal expenses look like, and how many you each get to and can afford to continue with over that year of mat leave will probably affect how this split works a lot.
I should have provided examples and more details on this. Here it is. My salary is deposited in my personal account, her salary is deposited in her personal account. Our joint expenses (groceries, mortgages, insurance, electricity bills, cars, gas, home improvement, etc.) are either taken care of from a joint account in which we deposit the same amounts each month (currently 50/50), or through a joint credit card that I'm paying off each month. At the end of each month, I take a look at the credit card statement and split expenses into 3 categories: joint, mine or hers, and then calculate how much she owes me for the joint expenses (currently 50%) and her personal expenses (100%).
I know all couples have different systems but this one has been just fine for us in the last couple of years. I'm the one making the calculations each month (I'm the analytic type), and she can access the calculations in our google sheet and see the full history of how much she owes me and why.
A lot of her "personal" money currently goes towards horses, while mine go into my investment accounts.
1) Will this arrangement still allow her to have spending money to do things? If this arrangement allows you to carry on as usual and get to do all your extracurriculars, but puts hers out of reach, or paid through personal savings than it's not going to work. Will it allow her to pay for childcare while she does things (ie. I had extra babysitting fees to do my weekly swimming on mat leave).
That is a very good point, I'll try to come up with a "pilot" month to see how much spending/personal money we would both get during the slow portion of her mat leave (the part when she only gets gov parental leave money). I want to come up with an arrangement where she is not prevented from keeping on with her extracurricular activities while keeping investments up.
Any childcare expenses, no matter the reason, would be common/joint expenses that we would split according to the then-applicable ratio (so 25/75). I'm already planning for extra babysitting to make sure she has the time to decompress and have some "her" time.
2) How will personal savings be impacted for the year? Do you still get to contribute 100% of RRSP and all personal savings goals, but she won't be able to as her salary is significantly reduced? Ideally, your personal savings will take a reasonably equal hit.
The goal would be to make sure that she still hits her personal savings goals. Most of her savings are coming through her employer pension plan and we will make sure that we continue payments on this front so she gets her full year worth of pension down the road. I'll have to come up with actual numbers and see how her salary reduction will impact her capacity to make payments.
This brings up a problematic situation - as of today, our investments and savings are in fact separated. We are both maxing out RRSPs but this money comes from our personal expenses and is not considered a joint expense. And because her personal expenses are generally quite higher than mine, it does happen that I have to lend her money so she can maximize her RRSPs each year, on top of funding her employer pension.
3) Baby expenses? They are joint right that is split 25/75? If she buys stuff for the baby, what category will it fall into if she thinks it's a needed item, and you think it's not? Also what if it's a momma item? Nursing tops for instance?
Yep, anything baby-related will be considered a joint expense, and the needed vs not needed would in my mind need to be explicitly discussed before purchase. While clothing is usually separated, momma items in my mind should be joint expenses as this serves a purpose for the family. Bring em nursing tops!
We are both fairly frugal and have agreed to be very careful in our baby spending so I'm hopeful that we will somewhat be able to stay on tracks...
Be prepared to change course, keep discussions open. If she is struggling getting out, struggling with post partum depression, struggling with sleep or feeding or feeling cash strapped any plan you make will have to be adaptable.
That's the attitude I'm going to strive for. I've been trying to be as supportive as possible and remain a positive force by her side so far while she was struggling emotionally during her first trimester. She won't feel cash strapped, I'm going to make sure it doesn't happen by being adaptable and dependable!
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Malcat is spot on here. Splitting mortgage payments is the easy part. Now that you're parents, you're about to add a ton of variable expenses into your financial life. I'd work out some sort of system with your spouse that makes administering these expenses very simple. You're not going to want to deal with the hassle of figuring out who owes what for each pack of diapers, for example.
When I was on mat leave (actually I'd quit for a couple years, but the leave paid out for the first year), DH gave me a monthly allowance. It sounds super juvenile and controlling, but all it meant was he transferred some money into my account each month so I could cover things like groceries, kid stuff, my own wants, etc. If I ever needed more, or less, than the allowance amount we just talked about it and came up with a solution. Open communication, transparency and flexibility are super important during these early years.
Our separate expenses system has always been set up as "his" and "hers" expenses because it makes administering them simpler. Over the years some of the bills have bounced between us depending on income or who cared more about the expense. However, overall our finances are planned jointly. Retirement planning in particular is a very joint exercise despite the fact we legally have to have individual RSP and TFSA accounts. This is just one way of doing it, you and your spouse will need to come up with your own version. Just be aware of not dumping all the new variable kid-related expenses and labour on one partner.
Thanks for the insight TrMama. Putting everything baby-related into our joint expenses should make it super simple for us. As mentioned above, all our joint expenses will be paid using a joint credit card or joint account and these will be split 25/75 to take into account actual income.
re: allowance, I'll do need to calculate how much money will come in on her side during the 35 weeks under gov allowance and figure out if this will be sufficient for her typical personal/retirement expenses. Agree with keeping it completely "open communication" and super flexible - my goal is that she feels as great as possible throughout this process.
re: retirement planning, as mentioned above, for us this is currently separated and I'll need to look into impacts on her side in the upcoming mat leave to ensure she is not penalized by our financial arrangement.
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+1 on discussing how you'll split kid expenses - and mama related expenses (pregnancy clothes, belly support, shoes that fit when feet grow due to pregnancy, nursing tops, pumps, etc.) now
Agree with another poster that she's taking a financial hit by being out of the workplace in terms of career progression, retirement savings, etc. For another thought...pregnancy does a number to a woman's health. I was nauseous every day until the last few weeks of pregnancy. Ligament pain, back pain, etc. Not to mention labor, c-sections, middle of the night feedings, etc. aren't a walk in the park either. Maybe you should actually be contributing extra to reflect that she's going the extra mile physically right now, rather than brainstorming and nitpicking ways to contribute less?
That is quite an important note and I completely agree that I should think about how I can support her as much as possible instead of nitpicking ways to contribute less. I feel a bit ashamed that I even though about all this now, it must be my analytical side...
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On a different note we just went through our second ultrasound and our little girl is in perfect health and growing quite well! Very very happy about that and mom looks like she's feeling great, so all in all, everything is going great!