Ask the Readers: How Do I Motivate My Boyfriend to Save Money?
Published on - February 4th, 2011 (by J.D. Roth) Although we cover the topic once or twice a year, I constantly get questions from people who are frustrated by the financial habits of their spouses and partners. Some people are Spenders, and some people are Savers. What can you do to get both partners on the same page?
Linda is the most recent GRS reader with a relationship issue. She wrote to ask how to get her boyfriend motivated to save money. Here’s her story:
How do I get someone motivated about saving money and being more frugal? Is it even possible?
My fiance and I are pretty different when it comes to money. I’m the Saver, and he’s the Spender. I’m all about the future, and he’s more about the present. He changed a lot after we got together, and now that we’re saving for a wedding, he has definitely cut back on most of the big expenses.
But I get frustrated that although he speaks of saving money and of eventually buying a house, he’s always wanting to eat out, to get the latest gadgets (he’s switched cell phones three times in two years, and bought a MacBook and an iPad), and to go on vacation. He’s a poster child for the latte factor: He has a gold card from Starbucks, which shows how much he frequents it.
His last job had really good pay, but not his current one, so that may also contribute to the spending habit. (He’s used to what he used to spend and hasn’t made the adjustment.) I’m not sure if I’m just giving him a hard time, or if there’s just some thing I’m not doing right. Do you have any advice?
First, Linda needs to know that it is possible for a Spender to become a Saver. I was a Spender for decades, but my wife is a Saver. In fact, Kris could have written this e-mail twenty years ago. Now, though, I’ve changed. I still have Spender tendencies (do they ever go away?), but they’re over-ruled by my new Saver habits.
But I didn’t get here overnight. It took time. And there were a lot of missteps along the way.
I made plenty of false starts toward frugality during the late nineties and early aughts, but I didn’t really change until I hit rock bottom. When we bought our house in 2004, I was overwhelmed by my debt and expenses. It was then that I was finally ready to “find religion”.
From the folks I’ve talked to, that’s a common theme: It’s tough to get somebody else to change until they’re ready to change. The motivation has to come from within. The question, then, is how do you inspire somebody to change their financial habits? I don’t know if there’s any one right answer. (But maybe readers can share what worked for them, or what worked for the people they know.)
Now, goals keep me going. I’ve learned that there are trade-offs. Sure, I want to buy books and comics and gadgets and expensive restaurant meals. And I do buy some of these things. But once I sat down and decided what was most important to me, it became easier for me to save.
Lately, I’ve been using travel as an example. I love to travel. Like George Bailey, I want to see the world. Because this goal is always with me (and I literally think of it every hour of every day now), it’s easy for me to make smarter choices. In fact, it motivates me to find new ways to save.
So, how can Linda help her boyfriend save money and become more frugal? I think she has to find a way to show him how his present choices affect his future options. Talk with him about what his big goals are — does he want to travel? own a business? go back to school? — and then discuss what it takes to get there. Until he understands that what he does today affects what he can do tomorrow, he’s not likely to change. (One sneaky way to try to get the point across is for Linda to talk about one of her goals, asking her boyfriend to help her figure out how to achieve it — even if she knows the answer already.)
What do you think? How do you motivate a spouse or partner to become better with money? For years, Kris tried to help me see the light, but I wasn’t ready. What could she have done differently? What can Linda do to help her boyfriend?
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When we got together, we were both spenders (though I never thought about this). Husband, thanks to a larger income, still was in the plus. I started freelancing and needed to save money for emergency funds. That was the first saver move.
Then husband’s income got lower, and lo and behold, the man whom I always thought to be more of a spender was better able to adjust his spending to his small income than I was. So – carefully check who’s really the spender and saver.
After living for 10 years without real plans and a lot of financial and work ups and downs, we finally have a goal (house) and a plan and I’m going back to freelancing to make money to put into this. And for the first time, we’re really inclined to save money into one pot
We still and always had separate banking accounts, and I think it’s a good thing in any combination of personalities and incomes.
Good luck with finding your solution, Linda.
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@ Kris, thank you so much for sharing. You and I have much in common. My man hasn’t made the strides JD has, but I didn’t marry him for his money.
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@#89 Jim
I also have a starbuck’s gold card. I probably go there once a week. But I pay for most of it with gift cards I get from my Discover card cashback (which I earn by only using it for the current bonus category).
As for Linda, I think she should make sure they have the same goals. As long as he’s saving and not adding debt, cut him some slack. It’s taken me almost 40 years and two divorces to realize that the only person you can change/control is yourself. If you can’t accept him as he is now, you should think long and hard about whether you should get married.
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I’m really tired of hearing, “he won’t change”, “he is who he is” or you shouldn’t have married him if you saw these red flags. Those who choose marriage or decide to be partners have to change, male or female. I don’t even know if I would use the word change, maybe adapt or how about you are not single anymore. Everything you do has an impact on your partner. One, male or female cannot spend money the way they used to when they were single….it’s a fact. I am dealing with this issue. Married 3 1/2 years and my husband is in financial denial. This is a matter of maturity not “well habits are hard to break, or you can’t change him”. These spouses need to grow up and put the family priorities first. No, you can’t nag…tried that, I wrote down everything we spend money on in a month…that didn’t work – he is still in denial that he spends too much monthly. My next idea is to ask him how much does he thinks he needs for a weeks period. I’m thinking he will be committed to spending only what he told me he needs. So when incidentals pop up, he will be forced to see what he has to spend. We’ll see how it goes. Again, including my husband, they need to set some priorities and take care of the family together.
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