My ex husband used to borrow from his mom without my knowledge. She also liked to control our finances. I never signed anything saying I would pay her back and I never agreed to any loa . So when I left they didn't get a penny from me. If you didn't sign anything then you shouldn't have to pay. Even if you went to counseling you would still have to deal with the MIL they might be able to take the house.
I Refused to Let My MIL Own My Family Budget, Now My Marriage Is on Thin Ice

Janet thought she and her husband were building a life together — good jobs, shared goals, a home they both invested in. But one argument about money led to a shocking reveal from her MIL that flipped everything upside down. What Janet discovered next changed their marriage overnight.
Here’s an email from Janet and her story:

Hi, Bright Side,
My husband Mark (34M) and I (32F) have been married for two years, together for five. We both have good jobs: I work in marketing, he’s an engineer, and on paper, our finances should be very straightforward. We agreed early on to keep a joint account for shared expenses and long-term goals. I trusted him completely, so I never questioned how we handled money together.
His mom, Linda, has always been overly involved. She calls him every day, knows the price of every appliance in our house, and comments on our spending like she’s the CFO of our lives. It annoyed me, but I tried to ignore it because Mark would say, “That’s just how she shows she cares.”
Fast-forward to last month. We’ve been trying to save for some long-delayed things: a cruise trip, replacing our dying washing machine, starting a baby fund. But every time I brought anything up, Mark kept saying, “We should check with my mom first” or “Let me run the numbers with her.” I thought it was weird, but he framed it as “she’s just good with money.”
Then I found out he was sending her screenshots of our bank account “so she could help us stay on track.” Yes, our bank account. Including my salary. I was furious.
That was the last straw, so I told him calmly, “I think I’ll open my own account for my income. Joint for shared bills, private for the rest.” I expected pushback from him, but what I didn’t expect was my MIL’s reaction.
She literally smirked, went to her home office (we were visiting them), and came back with a file folder. Inside was an official loan agreement, signed by Mark, stating that he owes his parents $200,000, which just so happens to be the exact amount he supposedly contributed as his half of the down payment on our big house two years ago.
In other words, he didn’t have savings like he told me. He borrowed the entire thing from his parents behind my back.
And now, according to his parents, they’re “overseeing our family budget” to make sure we have enough left each month to repay them. Which explains why his mom feels entitled to monitor every dollar we spend. I just sat there staring at the paper while she explained “the repayment plan.”
My husband didn’t even look ashamed, he just said, “Babe, they helped us. We’re a family. It’s normal to pay back a family loan together. Think of this as our first big challenge as a couple.”
But I never agreed to take on his debt. And I never agreed to have his mother policing my salary. Since then, I can’t even buy anything for the house without someone making a passive-aggressive comment about whether it’s “in the budget.” Every time I get paid, my husband reminds me what “our monthly obligation” is, even though I never signed anything.
I feel deceived, cornered, and weirdly, almost financially owned. Not by the bank — by his parents. I told him we need to set boundaries, and he got defensive, saying I’m “acting like money matters more than family loyalty.” I honestly don’t even know how to respond to that.
So here’s where I need advice:
Am I wrong for not wanting to repay a debt I never agreed to?
How big of a red flag is this situation, objectively?
Has anyone been through something similar — in-law financial entanglements, secret loans, etc.?
Is this fixable with boundaries and counseling, or am I looking at a giant iceberg ahead?
Any perspective would help. I feel completely blindsided, and I’m scared I’m making emotional decisions instead of rational ones.
— Janet G.
Thanks for trusting us with your story, Janet — it’s a tough one, and we appreciate you opening up about something so personal. These situations are layered, messy, and emotionally exhausting, especially when finances and family overlap. Here are some steps you may want to follow while trying to solve your deep family conflict:
Clarify Your Legal Liability.

CALL LAWYER AND BLEED YOUR HUSBAND AND MIL DRY ! ☠️☠️
Is YOUR name on the loan papers? Did YOU SIGN ANYTHING saying that YOU would be repaying the loan? Get OUT NOW. Get your OWN bank account NOW. Get a DIVORCE ATTORNEY, NOW. This isn't just mommy sticking her nose into your life. This is FINANCIAL ABUSE. YOUR HUSBAND IS A COWARD, A WUSS AND HE IS MOMMY WHIPPED. If you have to cut your losses, (which MAY be their plan), do it. But get out, NOW. THERE CAN BE NO TRUST, EVER AGAIN. You don't need any advice, you need to grow a spine and GET OUT, NOW.
It might even worse if the house is not in joint name. She lost everything. Sue the husband and MIL to return all the money.
That is what I was thinking about. It STILL might be worth the loss, to get rid of the husband and his parents. ESPECIALLY THE MIL.
Before agreeing to anything, check whether you’re actually legally responsible for your husband’s private loan. If your name isn’t on that agreement, you may not owe a dime — and knowing that gives you firmer footing in every conversation that follows.
Separate Finances to Protect Yourself.
Open your own account and route your income there. Legally, you have the right to control your earnings, and practically, it helps set boundaries when in-laws start operating like debt collectors.
Document Every Financial Conversation.
Keep written records of what your husband and his parents say regarding repayment expectations. If things escalate or become unclear, having a paper trail protects you legally and helps avoid “he said, she said” spirals.
Push for a Professional Mediator.
A neutral third party — a financial counselor, mediator, or therapist — can help untangle both the legal misunderstandings and the emotional power struggles. It’s often easier to set boundaries and negotiate repayment expectations when someone impartial is guiding the conversation.
Sometimes, realizing you shouldn’t get married only takes a second, a single phrase, or one text message. Get ready for plot twists that even the writers of Santa Barbara would envy.
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