Sit down at least once a year, preferably more,
throughout your marriage to have
an involved discussion about your finances. Don't
wait until crisis time
to review and plan. That can lead
to much more stress and general anxiety associated
with financial discussions.
Instead, your annual financial discussion
allows you both to calmly and rationally assess
where you
are, determine if your financial
goals have changed, and decide what you need to
do to meet your goals.
If you have this discussion more
than once a year, you'll be that much more financially
in sync.
Important Documents
You both should know exactly where all
your important documents are located including insurance
policies,
wills, tax forms, bank account numbers,
investment specifics and more.
Current Debts and Assets
Add up all of your debts. See
how much you have paid off
in the past year and decide if that's acceptable
or if you need to try harder in the coming
year. Do the same with assets.
Understand
how your money is working for
you and try to determine if it should
be working harder.
Budget
Get an idea of what you've been
spending your money on. If
your spending doesn't match your priorities,
fine-tune your
budget to help
you get the most out of your
income.
Re-evaluate Your Goals
Revisit the financial goals you
made in the last annual meeting.
Are you moving towards those goals?
Do those goals still matter to you?
Talk about any other goals you would
like to work on, both
short-term and long-term.
Find Your
Vulnerability
Find the weak links on your
financial armor. Do you have
too much debt? Are either of your jobs/incomes
not secure? Do you have insufficient
income to cover your spending?
Just
identifying these weaknesses can
help you avoid some pitfalls. But
you should also talk about
how you can strengthen
these areas and incorporate
these strategies
into your financial goals.
Day-to-day
Responsibilities
Is the division of responsibilities
you made still practical? Is
it working out or does one
person feel
overburdened?
Learning About
Yourself
What have you learned about your
financial self in the past
year? It's as important that you talk
about your feelings concerning
money matters as it is to talk
about the practicality of money.