Uncomfortable Conversations: What is financial infidelity and how can you come clean?

Welcome back to Uncomfortable Conversations About Money, a new series where we will tackle topics or situations around money that make you uneasy. We'll outline the problem and try to get you some usable solutions.

The dilemma: 

A wife with a habit of buying – and hiding – expensive shoes from her husband.

A husband with a secret online gambling addiction.

A partner racking up credit card debt for purchases the other partner doesn’t know about.

These are all examples of financial infidelity. 

But what is financial infidelity?

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“At its core, financial infidelity is a breach of trust around what you're doing or not doing with money,” said Ed Coambs, a financial therapist.

“When we're in financial infidelity, we're doing it because we're either trying to protect ourselves from feeling some relational pain or from them experiencing or me evoking something inside of them that's uncomfortable,” he said.

Are you keeping secrets about finances? That's financial infidelity.
Are you keeping secrets about finances? That's financial infidelity.

Coambs is the past president of the Financial Therapy Association, an organization of professionals with combined therapy and financial planning expertise. He's also the author of "The Healthy Love & Money Way,'' and hosts a podcast called "Healthy Love and Money."

Financial infidelity can violate any type of relationship, including a spouse or partner, sibling, parent, friend, employer, or – “here’s the real kicker, against yourself,” Coambs said.

You're being unfaithful to yourself when you are not realistic about your finances or avoid your relationship with money, “so we're kind of cheating on our own integrity around what we want to be doing with money,” he said.

Ed Coambs is a financial therapist based in Charlotte, North Carolina. He is also past president of the Financial Therapy Association and has written a book and hosts a podcast about love and money.
Ed Coambs is a financial therapist based in Charlotte, North Carolina. He is also past president of the Financial Therapy Association and has written a book and hosts a podcast about love and money.

More broadly, financial infidelity usually happens when there’s “likely something that's happening in that relationship that's making it not safe or acceptable to be honest or transparent about how you're spending money,” Coambs said. “When we fear criticism or shame or judgment for what we're doing with money, we're much more likely to start hiding what we're doing.”

That may mean hiding your shopping habits or purchases, Coambs said. But Coambs has also had patients who have failed to pay personal or business taxes, and parents who don’t want to disclose their financial problems to their adult children when it comes to estate planning.

More than 40% of people have committed financial infidelity

Financial infidelity is rather prevalent in relationships. In a 2021 study, the National Endowment for Financial Education found that two in five (43%) people in a relationship confess to having committed some act of financial deception, with 85% stating that indiscretion affected the current/past relationship in some way.