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Dave Ramsey reveals the money rule every married couple needs

Nobody walks down the aisle expecting to fight about a credit card statement. Yet money consistently ranks among the top sources of conflict in American marriages, and it trails only infidelity as a leading cause of divorce.

The way many couples respond to that risk is telling. Separate checking accounts, separate credit cards, and entirely separate money lives have become the default arrangement, especially among younger spouses.

The thinking goes that a little financial independence keeps the peace. If nobody shares an account, nobody argues over what comes out of it.

In my years covering personal finance advice, I have watched that arrangement grow from an outlier into something close to conventional wisdom for newlyweds.

Dave Ramsey believes the new conventional wisdom has things exactly backward.

The bestselling personal finance author and host of The Ramsey Show has spent decades telling couples to merge every dollar they earn. On June 29, he condensed that philosophy into a few blunt sentences that have been ricocheting around social media ever since.

"Marriage isn't 50/50. Marriage is 100/100," Ramsey wrote on X. "If you're married, 'my money' and 'your money' do not exist. It's OUR money."

He called it the only way for couples to win, together.

 Dave Ramsey draws one of his hardest lines yet on how spouses handle money.
Dave Ramsey draws one of his hardest lines yet on how spouses handle money.

Ippei Naoi / Getty Images

Money fights are quietly breaking American marriages

Ramsey's company has spent years polling couples on exactly this question, and the findings help explain why his rule touches such a nerve.

Ramsey has offered blunt advice on marriage and money before, often responding to couples wrestling with lopsided incomes and uneven debts, as TheStreet reported in 2025.

Money is the number one issue married couples fight about, and it ranks as the second leading cause of divorce behind infidelity, according to a study of more than 1,000 U.S. adults from Ramsey Solutions.

The secrecy problem may be the most corrosive part. Nearly half of people in committed relationships, 45%, admit they do not know everything about their spouse's or partner's finances, according to a January survey from Bankrate.

Here is what the research shows about money inside marriages:

  • 63% of all marriages start off in debt, according to Ramsey Solutions.
  • Couples who fight about money carry roughly $30,000 in consumer debt on average, per the same study
  • 41% of couples with consumer debt argue about money, versus 25% of debt-free couples, Ramsey Solutions also found.
  • 43% of Americans say keeping financial secrets is at least as bad as physical cheating, according to Bankrate.

Those numbers describe a slow leak, not a blowout. Few marriages end over a single purchase. They erode over years of small arguments and quiet omissions.

I ran a quick calculation on what that debt load actually feels like. If even half of that $30,000 sat on a credit card at roughly 20% interest, the interest alone would run about $250 a month. That is a recurring argument delivered to your household every 30 days.

Related: Dave Ramsey says one daily habit costs you $5,000 a year

Dave Ramsey says married couples must combine everything

The June 29 post is not a one-off. It is the shortest version of an argument Ramsey has been making since he began teaching money classes in the 1990s.

Separate finances create division, Ramsey argued in the post, while couples who handle money together build trust, teamwork and a shared future they both believe in.

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When a caller once asked him whether newlyweds should merge accounts or simply split expenses down the middle, his answer left no wiggle room. "You combine everything. There is no middle," he said on The Ramsey Show, in remarks reported by Benzinga.

He often points to the wedding ceremony itself, noting that the preacher pronounced the couple as one, not as a joint venture.

What struck me when I went back through his older interviews is how little the message has moved in three decades. The delivery keeps getting sharper, but the rule never changes.

That consistency matters, because the country has been drifting the other way, and fast.

Among Gen Z couples who are married or living together, 88% keep at least some of their money separate, compared with 52% of baby boomer couples, according to a separate Bankrate survey. Nearly half of those Gen Z couples keep everything apart.

The youngest married Americans, put plainly, are building exactly the arrangement Ramsey is warning against.

What joint account research says about Ramsey's rule

You do not have to take a radio host's word for any of this. I ran Ramsey's claim against the academic research, and the evidence lines up more closely than his critics might expect.

Researchers followed 230 engaged and newlywed couples for two years, randomly assigning some to open joint bank accounts and others to keep their money separate, according to Indiana University.

Couples told to merge their money sustained strong relationship quality across those first two years of marriage, while couples with separate accounts showed the typical newlywed decline, per the study published in the Journal of Consumer Research.

The joint account couples also fought less about money and felt better about how household finances were handled, the researchers found. Merging promoted shared goals and a sense that nobody was keeping score.

Lead researcher Jenny Olson described the difference as a shift in mindset. Partners with merged money helped each other because one of them had a need, while partners with separate accounts treated favors more like transactions to be repaid, she explained. Separate accounts also made it feel easier to walk away from the relationship.

There is one caveat worth taking seriously. Couples do not necessarily need to combine every dollar, "but you do need to be aware of where your money is going," Bankrate senior industry analyst Ted Rossman said.

Financial therapists raise a sharper exception, cautioning that fully merged accounts can be risky for people recovering from financially abusive relationships. Ramsey's rule assumes two partners acting in good faith.

What married couples should do with Ramsey's advice

You do not have to merge every account this weekend to act on any of this.

The common thread connecting Ramsey's post, the survey data and the academic research is visibility. Couples who can see each other's money stop keeping score, and couples who stop keeping score fight less.

Ramsey's version is the maximalist one, a single pot with a single plan. The research suggests even partial moves in that direction, like a joint bills account, a monthly budget meeting or a full debt disclosure, buy real trust.

The couples most at risk are not the ones who deliberately choose separate accounts. They are the ones who never have the conversation at all.

So if you are married and have never asked your spouse what winning with money actually looks like, have that talk soon. It is a lot cheaper than letting the next money fight find you first.

Related: Kevin O'Leary reveals the gift mistake ruining marriages

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This story was originally published July 10, 2026 at 6:33 PM.

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