The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Make a point to talk to your honey about money

- Michelle Singletary Write to Michelle Singletary c/o The Washington Post, 1150 15th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071 or michelle.singletary @washpost.com.

WASHINGTON — There are so many things I love about my husband, including that we have the same financial values.

At the start of our marriage almost 24 years ago, we laid out how we would handle our finances together. We had the money talk long before we planned any aspect of our wedding.

I was thinking about this as we headed toward the lovers’ holiday, Valentine’s Day. Many couples fail to realize that there’s a business aspect to their relationsh­ip. Money matters have to be worked out.

People are cohabiting in record numbers, while marriage rates are declining. There are civil unions, and legalized gay marriage in a growing number of states. But what happens when these relationsh­ips, many entering new legal territory, end?

The financial fallout is often messy, hostile, petty and expensive. CreditCard­s.com found in a poll that about one in five Americans in a relationsh­ip said they’ve spent $500 or more without their partner’s knowledge.

Last year, the American Academy of Matrimonia­l Lawyers reported a jump in same-sex couples seeking legal advice to discuss cohabitati­on agreements and other legal strategies. In a 2013 poll, 63 percent of divorce attorneys said they’ve seen an increase in prenuptial agree- ments. Forty-six percent had noted a rise in women initiating requests for prenups.

Do more people need “love deals”?

That’s the case made in “The New Love Deal: Everything You Must Know Before Marrying, Moving In, or Moving On!” by Gemma Allen, Michele Lowrance and Terry Savage. Allen is a divorce attorney. Lowrance, a former divorce court judge, is now a mediator who works with both divorcing couples and those who want prenuptial agreements. Savage is a nationally syndicated personal finance columnist.

Their book is a cautionary tale that every couple should read, even if they don’t feel compelled to draw up a legal contract for their union.

“The best relationsh­ip ‘deal memos’ define the obligation­s of each party while the partnershi­p is working — and the rights of each party if it fails,” the authors write. “Whether you are cohabiting, marrying, or already married but negotiatin­g through a rough patch, the act of discussing not only financial but structural issues (who gets what, who does what, who owes what) will lead you to a better understand­ing of each other.”

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