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The one trick this happy couple swears by to avoid fights

When they first started dating, Jill convinced Brandon that he didn’t need to pay for everything just to be a gentleman.

The one trick this happy couple swears by to avoid fights

This article was written by Alisa Hrustic and provided by our partners at Men’s Health.

It's hard to be Chip and Joanna Gaines-level happy when you've got cable and internet bills to pay, savings accounts to fund, and a social life to pay for (you can't Netflix and chill every weekend, can you?). And while you're pretty much destined to disagree about money, one couple in Scotland says they’ve found the magic solution: Brandon and his wife Jill keep their finances completely separate, they told Business Insider, and they believe that decision keeps their marriage going.

The couple never really clashed financially. Brandon admits that he’s never been a big spender and saved a lot of cash during the first five to seven years of his career as a software developer. Plus, even when they first started dating, Jill convinced Brandon that he didn’t need to pay for everything just to be a gentleman.

Money issues cause even the happiest of couples to argue (in fact, it’s one of the three most common relationship fights), but after Jill called Brandon out for trying to pay for everything, they’ve kept their cash separate ever since, Brandon says.

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While they do share a joint account to pay for things like bills and their mortgage, they also hold their own separate accounts for personal spending. So if Jill wants to take a trip to a spa, she can do her thing. And if Brandon wants to grab a couple of beers and go to a concert with the guys, that’s his money to blow.

This way, “everyone was happy,” they say. Plus, it just seemed like the natural thing to do to avoid awkward arguments, Jill explains. (Even though every couple should argue about money at some point.)

Maybe creating a budget together works best for you and your partner, but don’t knock Brandon and Jill’s method until you try it: “I think our marriage would’ve been doomed if we had everything in a joint account,” Jill says. “I think that would’ve caused a lot of arguments.”

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