There's more than one way to cheat. Many American couples have struggled with what experts call "financial infidelity" — the act of lying or keeping secrets about money from one's significant other — and it's more common than you might think.
A recent study by Forbes Advisor and Prolific found that 38% of U.S. adults have lied to a romantic partner about their finances at some point in their lives. At the same time, most Americans don't take it lightly — 54% said dishonesty about money is just as bad as other forms of infidelity. Other research has confirmed this attitude; a poll by CreditCards.com found that 42% of adults said financial cheating is equivalent to the "physical" kind.
But lying about money isn't just bad for relationships. It can also be a major threat to a couple's finances — and a tricky challenge for their financial advisor.
"It's an incredibly difficult situation to be in as an advisor, because you're confronting one partner in front of the other," said Jeffrey Edwards, the president of Atlas Financial Planning in Irvine, California. "Much like in marriage or couples counseling, you have to let the 'offender' understand it's not what they're doing that's wrong — hiding it is."
Here are some of the top areas where Americans are financially "cheating" on their partners, and some of the ways their wealth managers are trying to help: