AITAH for keeping some of my bonus secret from my husband?

After more than 20 years of marriage, one woman quietly started diverting about 20% of her annual bonus into a secret personal account: With both salaries flowing into a joint account for bills and family expenses, she felt she needed a little breathing room—especially since her husband frequently comments on the cost of even small everyday purchases.

She insists she’s not a big spender and that the secret fund is just for guilt-free discretionary buys without the constant “how much was that?” remarks: But after posting her dilemma online, she’s wondering if hiding money from her spouse makes her the asshole—especially once the full picture (including his own hidden cash pile) came out.

‘AITAH for keeping some of my bonus secret from my husband?’

The OP (47F) and her husband (51M) have been married over 20 years and share a joint account where both salaries go in and all bills, including the mortgage, come out:

I (47f) and my husband (51m) have been married for over 20 years. We operate our accounts jointly with all of our salaries being paid into the joint account each...

Here’s where she thinks she might be the AH:

I earn approx 25% more than my husband as a salary but our wages are basically pooled for family use

This is where I think I might be the AH. I am also entitled to an annual bonus. I have been secretly diverting approx 20% of that bonus to an...

he does comment every time I buy something about how much it costs and I just can’t stand hearing that. So I use this account for my discretionary spending, so...

UPDATE: Thanks all, as I suspected, I am the AH.. However, a bit more context for the group:

* My husband is paid about 25% of his income in cash, which is NOT deposited to our joint account. He also does cash jobs on the weekend. All of...

I have no idea how much cash he has accumulated, he occasionally deposits some to our joint bank account but I don’t keep track of the ins and outs of...

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* Some of you asked about our financial situation. We are very fortunate that we don’t need to worry about money. Our home is paid off and we have 2...

* The comments about spending from my husband do not relate to big or frequent purchases by me. I am not a shopper. I literally have 5 pairs of shoes...

The comments about the cost of items simply happens for every day purchases, as an example, tonight we went to the shops quickly and I purchased 2 x $6 items,...

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* as to the comments about if my husband has money for sneaky purchases of his own, well I guess he does because he has bought multiple big ticket items...

without consulting me first from his cash stash and honestly didn’t care, because we have the money to do so

But I will obviously have to self reflect because I suspect I don’t care about his big purchases because I know what I am doing with my own sneaky fund,...

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Money secrets in marriage are one of the fastest ways to erode trust—even when the finances are otherwise solid: The OP started hiding part of her bonus to avoid her husband’s frequent comments on small purchases, but the secrecy itself became the real issue. While she’s not a lavish spender and their overall situation is comfortable, the act of diverting funds without discussion crosses into financial infidelity territory for many.

From her perspective, it’s harmless: she’s simply carving out a small space for guilt-free spending in a relationship where her husband’s remarks make her dread even basic buys. But the update flips the script—her husband has his own undisclosed cash stash from side jobs, used for big-ticket items like cars and boats without consulting her. This reveals a double standard: she’s bothered by his comments on her small purchases, yet unbothered by his secret big ones.

Experts on marital finances agree that transparency about money is crucial, even in long-term marriages. Financial therapist Amanda Clayman notes in a 2022 Psychology Today article: “Hidden accounts or ‘secret money’ often start as a way to avoid conflict, but they almost always create bigger problems later. The real fix is open communication about personal spending allowances that both partners agree on—no judgment allowed.” (Psychology Today, 2022).

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The healthiest approach is usually a mutual agreement on “fun money”: Each spouse gets an equal (or proportional) amount each month or paycheck that goes into separate personal accounts with zero commentary allowed. This respects individual autonomy while keeping joint finances transparent. If comments about spending are a recurring trigger, couples counseling can help address the underlying communication issues.

Bottom line: Hiding money, even small amounts, signals deeper problems with trust and communication: The OP’s self-reflection in the update is a great first step. Talking openly about setting up agreed-upon personal funds could resolve the tension without secrets—and prevent resentment from building on either side.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

The online community came down hard on this one, with the vast majority calling the OP the asshole—at least before the update revealed the husband’s own hidden cash pile:

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Most readers said hiding money is a betrayal of trust, no matter the reason:

JadedByFire − I guess it depends on whether you’d feel the same if you found out your husband had been diverting money to a separate account for years without telling...

If you’d be fine with that, then NTA I’m not even saying YTA for doing it, but if your husband found out about you lying to him - not only...

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I’m assuming, hiding your purchases and/or how much they cost, your marriage may end up a bit rocky. Edited after update to add: OPs update shows her post was very...

If OP had stated he kept a separate cash pile and bought large stuff without asking, the responses in the thread would have been VERY different. That makes OP the...

K_A_irony − YTA. You need for you two to both agree to have separate personal accounts for discretionary spending. He gets one, you get one. Lying about money is really...

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If you two can't agree on this discretionary spending accounts, you have bigger issues. I say this as a woman who is married long term. You don't hide money from...

Professional_Pop8867 − Wow to me YTA. Just ask yourself how you’d react if this was an opposite situation? You’ll get your answer.

uniqueme1 − Yta. Secrets are toxic to a marriage. If you wanted to do it and tell him that you were? No problem. You doing it on the sly because...

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mrmasterly − I mean… yeah YTA. Not for wanting to have a separate account you fund, but for the hiding it. If your relationship is so s__tty you can’t address...

and/or overtly snarky comments and have him respond respectfully then you have bigger problems than your bonus. I assume he would go after half your bag if you ditched his...

Affectionate_Bat3402 − I think it depends if you found out he was getting a bonus every year and hiding it from you would you be fine with it ? For...

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You’ve been together 20 years you should be able to have a conversation about not wanting to hear his comments about spending instead of just hiding money.

CoachMACC − Let’s be real if he was putting money into another account, you’d be accusing him of cheating.   YTA

marcaygol − YTA Why I'm not surprised to see comments condoning lying and financial infidelity based purely on OP's gender?

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BenWa-SF − YTA. It’s your partner. You would be pissed of the shoe was on the other foot.

EatsPeanutButter − “AITAH for lying to my husband? ” Yes, yes you are. YTA. Talk to him. Tell him what you shared here.

Tell him this issue bothers you and that you’d like to set aside a fun money budget for each of you that you can spend freely. And stop lying to...

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Fragrant_Fox7109 − YTA If you have to question whether or not something is “right” or not, especially in circumstances like this, you’re probably wrong. Lying by omission is still lying....

How would you feel if he diverted part of his paycheck to a secret account to use as discretionary funds? The fact that you make more money is irrelevant if...

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My late husband and I came to an agreement because he made significantly more than I did. We decided on giving ourselves a fun money allowance each month.

I didn’t have any say on what he spent it on and he didn’t have a say in what I spent mine on. But I feel like it should be...

z-eldapin − Come on. How would you feel if he was doing the same thing? Instead of hiding money, figure out your communication about spending.

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A couple of commenters gave her a pass or suggested a practical solution:

mygardengrows − Advice from my nana: every smart dog buries a few bones. NTAH

MarionberryOk2874 − You’re NTA for wanting your ‘own money’ for discretionary spending, but YTA for lying about it.

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Lighthouse_on_Mars − My husband and I also have joint finances. We get around this by having separate Fun Money accounts. After all the bills are paid, savings topped up, retirement...

we put in an equal amount of money into separate 'Fun Money' accounts. We each get the same amount each month to save or spend as we like. I can...

No one gets to make comments or judgements about what the other spends their fun money on. I can spend all my money on eating out in a month, or...

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The OP admitted she’s probably the AH and promised to reflect—especially after revealing her husband has his own secret cash stash: While many called her out for the secrecy, the update sparked debate about fairness and hypocrisy in marriage finances. The real takeaway? Open communication about “fun money” could fix this without anyone hiding anything.

What do you think?: If you were in a long-term marriage with joint finances, would you be okay with a small secret fund for personal spending—or would you insist on total transparency?: Drop your thoughts in the comments!

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