Someone on Reddit posed an interesting question to people earning $300,000 or more: Do you expect your partner to match your income and split everything down the middle? The responses came flooding in, and they reveal something pretty interesting about how wealthy couples actually think about money.
Marriage Isn't a Roommate Agreement
The overwhelming majority said no, they don't expect or even want a strict 50/50 split. Instead, they see marriage as a partnership where everything belongs to both people.
"We are a team, there isn't a 'mine and yours,' there is 'ours'," one person earning over $1.2 million per year wrote. "I buy and do what I want, she does the same." Another added, "My money is hers and her money is mine. We make shared decisions on all major purchases."
Many pointed out that their partners stuck with them through the broke years. "She's been with me since we were 23 and getting our lights shut off because we couldn't pay," one commenter said. "Mine's hers. Hers mine."
That loyalty matters. When someone supported you through grad school or career building, it changes the calculation entirely. The income may show up in one person's bank account now, but both people contributed to making it happen.
Income Isn't the Only Contribution That Counts
A major theme throughout the thread was that bringing home a paycheck isn't the only way to add value to a household. Many respondents said their spouses are stay-at-home parents, manage the home, or run smaller businesses while handling most of the family responsibilities.
"I make about $650K a year. My wife runs a little online business that profits maybe around $40K a year," one user shared. "She also helps take care of our kids. My money is hers and her money is mine."
"I make north of $500K. My wife is a SAHM and enjoys spending my money (responsibly)," one of the more popular comments said. "She worked coffee shop jobs, Instacart, DoorDash, etc, to pay the bills when I was in grad school and we were broke. She deserves this income as much as I do."
Others noted that their partner could work if they wanted to, but having someone manage the household creates better balance for everyone. "I don't care whether she works or saves money. I handle the heavy lifting so she and the kids can have a comfortable life," one person wrote.
The math here is pretty straightforward: childcare, household management, and emotional labor all have real economic value. Just because they don't generate a W-2 doesn't mean they're not contributing.
High-Earning Women Face Different Challenges
Several high-earning women joined the conversation and shared that dating can be complicated when you're the bigger earner. Male insecurity came up repeatedly as an issue.
"My ex left me because I was making more than him. That was his insecurities," one woman wrote. "My current husband loves [that] I'm a boss lady. He is so proud and supportive. That is the type of man we deserve."
"I was making 200k more than him and I got called gold digger," another said. "The projection was strong. There's good men out there but most of them are intimidated by successful and high earning women."
Still, some said they prefer dating someone with a similar earning level, not because of the money itself but because of shared values. "I made over $400K this year and I just want to find a good man," one commenter shared. "He doesn't need to make as much as me, but having a provider mindset is important."
The 50/50 Split Gets Rejected
While a handful of people mentioned using proportional contributions based on income, almost everyone rejected the idea of literally splitting bills in half.
"If you're married, nothing is 50/50," one wrote. "Being in a relationship and expecting everything to be split 50/50 is basically a roommate you have sex with," another added.
And as one person put it bluntly, "I make half a million so that my wife is free to make nothing."
Some acknowledged that financial disagreements happen when values don't align. But the common thread was that keeping score financially creates resentment, not harmony. "Money is the number one cause of divorce," one wrote. "Being possessive vs. cooperative about funds is a resentment breeding ground."
The takeaway from this thread is pretty clear: Most high earners see marriage as a genuine partnership, not a transactional arrangement. What matters isn't who brings home the bigger paycheck, but whether you're both working toward the same goals and supporting each other along the way.




