Follow this topicFollow this topic Knowledge » Money saving tips

Love can save you money!

Harvey Jones
by Lovemoney Staff Harvey Jones on 14 February 2010  |  Comments 2 comments

Today marks Valentine’s Day. And whether you love it or you hate it, being in a relationship really can save you £££

Love isn't all fun and fluff, whatever the Valentine's Day industry claims. Actually, it's better than that, because there are plenty of financial benefits as well. So don't be stingy with your loved one on 14th February - a bunch of flowers and dinner at a fancy Italian are a small price to pay for the financial benefits you will enjoy throughout your life. Here are just 10 of them.

1) Two can live as cheaply as one

Pity poor single people. They're always throwing away half an avocado, because they couldn't finish it themselves and now it's gone rotten. Same problem when they buy a bunch of bananas. Most ready meals are still for two people (and no, don't pretend you're going to eat half and reheat the rest tomorrow, it won't happen).

It's the same for big-ticket items. You don't buy a smaller sofa because you're single. You don't carpet half the living room, buy half a car, or choose a 21-inch flat screen TV rather than a 42-inch dobber. Singles face the same costs as couples, on only one income. Fall in love, and double your spending power!

2) Couples pay half

Banks don't offer a single person's discount. Couples and singles pay exactly the same interest rates on their mortgages and credit cards, and the same penalties on their overdrafts. Callous bankers don't even give singles a 25% discount, like they get on their Council Tax.

3) Loving bundle

Once your hearts have mingled, so will your telephone bills. Two landlines become one... ahh. The same goes for your digital TV and broadband services. Coupling is merely another form of bundling.

4) It's good to share

Your partner has just moved in - congratulations! Your home insurance policy won't cost more because two people live in your home instead of one, but now you can now split the bill.

Your car insurance premiums may increase if you add your loved one to the policy, but they shouldn't double (unless you've fallen in love with a 19-year old boyracer with motoring convictions.) Just make sure you don't get caught out by a technique known as 'fronting' - you can find out more in our video: Don't make this car insurance mistake.

And for tips on how to slash your insurance bills even further, make sure you adopt our Slash your insurance costs goal.

5) Hot love

So utility bills are soon set to hit £2,000 a year? That's bad news for everybody, but at least couples can go halves. Better still, they can make even bigger savings by cuddling up together and turning down the heating a notch. Single people must shiver alone.

Don't forget, if you are worried about rising utility bills, our Lower your household bills goal is packed full of tips to help you slash the cost. What's more, you can compare a range of gas and electricity tariffs on the lovemoney.com comparison tool, so you'll be able to find one that's cheaper for you.

6) You can be a slob

Remember how expensive it was being single? New clothes, nights out, posh hairdos, beauty treatments and manicures (I hear it's even more expensive for women). Once you move in with someone, you can let yourself go. Don't scoff, millions do.

Simply lounge around the house in an old pair of sweatpants, munching crisps in front of the box and occasionally stirring yourself to swear at your partner. You'll save £££s!

7) Married to your job

Oh no you've lost your job! Never mind, at least your partner's income will see you through until you beg, claw or sleep your way back into gainful employment. If your partner isn't earning, send them down the job centre instead. It's their turn! Single people don't have that back-up, they're on their own.

Married people who lose their jobs also have a better chance of finding a new one. That's a fact! If you're looking for work, your prospects are much better if you have a degree, own a home with a mortgage... or are married, according to new figures from Office for National Statistics.

8) Pension fun

Many people find saving for a pension a bit tedious and leave all the legwork to their partner. Single people don't have that option. But of course that's a risky strategy (although you may have little choice if you're the one who gave up work to raise the kids).

Til death us do part really does make sense when it comes to pension planning. Just make sure you buy a joint life annuity rather than a single life plan, otherwise your retirement income will dry up if your partner dies first.

9) Couples will inherit the earth

Well not exactly the earth, but they will inherit each other's money and house. Married couples and registered civil partners can transfer assets to each other when they die, without having to pay inheritance tax. This is known as the spouse civil partner exemption.

It doesn't apply to cohabiting couples, making it a rare tax incentive for getting married. David Cameron has been trying to dream up a few more fiscal marital aids, but hasn't got very far.

10) Breaking up is very hard to do

And very expensive. The average divorce costs £28,000. And after you've broken up, you've got all the costs of being single again (see point 6). Your partner may have a few nasty habits, but you should stand by him/her, especially in the middle of a recession. You wouldn't quit a well-paid job right now, so don't renounce the financial rewards of being in a couple, even if your partner has forgotten Valentine's Day (again). To err is human, to forgive is financially responsible.

Of course there can be one or two financial disadvantages to being in a couple, particularly if your partner is lax with the lucre. But hey, it's Valentine's Day, a time for love and romance, so let's not dwell on that...

More: Bag a free holiday with your credit card | Make money from your friends

Compare home insurance with lovemoney.com

Compare car insurance with lovemoney.com

Enjoyed this? Show it some love

Twitter
General

Comments (2)

  • The Bank Manager
    Love rating 56
    The Bank Manager said

    Harvey: Give it a rest about callous bankers will you (point 2)!

    What annoys me, is that journalists love to group Bank staff into one collective and then we get 'labelled', even to the most humble of staff who serve at the counter.

    Do you genuinely think that we all get stupendous bonuses in the tens of thousands of Pounds, from senior executives (of which I am NOT one), to Customer Services staff at an enquiries counter?

    NO, we don't.

    In my department, there have been no bonuses for many years, because even though we act efficiently and assist our front-line colleagues to support their customers (which may lead to them obtaining their bonus?), there are no funds in the pot to express gratitude for the work my colleagues and I have done, so I'm no callous Bank Manager.

    Did the Enquiries Clerk at you branch repossess a house from a customer, did they personally benefit from applying an overdraft fee to an account and relish in either experience?? NO! So why suggest that as a Bank official, they are callous?

    Please, give it a rest and if you wish to express an opinion about Banks, then perhaps you could level it at the appropriate hierarchy and NOT tar us all with the same brush.

    Who knows, next week when you need something from your Bank - say a new cheque book, statement, foreign currency or plastic card - the person who helps you and provides the quality service you expect, may be a long-standing, hard working individual, whose not received a bonus and is no more callous than you, but they are a Banker. Are you going to write poorly about them?

    It's unusual, that when I talk to my friends (yes, even Bank Managers have those!!), they can at times comment about how good or bad their Bank is, but the bottom line is it's simply down to the last experience they had when they interacted at their Branch.

    There are tens of thousands of lives that are supported each day by their Bank and the benefits they enjoy are taken for granted, just as much as you would in expecting your supermarket having an item in stock for your consumption.

    Yes there have been mistakes made in the past and the economy proves that, but stop blaming the majority for any failings of the minority.

    Thanks for letting me express this, albeit I appreciate we are not all good bankers.

    However, since I've been doing this for 25+ years straight from school and educating myself further at my own time and expense in my evenings, I feel I'm dedicated enough to stick up for my colleagues and I still believe the old mantra that 'the customer is King'.

    So kindly choose your comments more carefully and be specific as to whom you seek to slate.

    Report on 16 February 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Harvey Jones
    Love rating 22
    Harvey Jones said

    I was always warned not to provoke the fury of The Bank Manager, but now I've done it.

    My use of the phrase "callous bankers" in this context was ironic, I wouldn't expect them to give single people a 25% discount.

    It is strange. I have been slamming bankers for months, the first time I do it jokingly, I whip up a fury.

    Report on 19 February 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

Post a comment

Sign in or register to post a reply.

Our top deals

Provider & account name Credit rate (AER)
Based on £1
Overdraft
rate

Based on £1
Apply
now

Santander 123 Current Account

0.0% 0% plus £1.00 per day usage fee Apply

first direct 1st Account

N/A 15.9% EAR Apply

Halifax Reward Current Account

N/A 0% plus £2.00 per day usage fee Apply
W3C  Thank you for using One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest