Press Releases
Money Causes the Most Stress for Couples, According to New Ally Survey
Jun 12, 2018
More Than One Third of Americans Who Are Married or in a Serious Relationship Report Money Causes the Most Stress in Their Relationship

SANDY, Utah, June 12, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- More than two million couples get married annually in the United States. Besides wedding day jitters, chief among their concerns before and after they get married often is how to manage their finances. With the summer wedding season here, The Harris Poll conducted an online survey on behalf of Ally Bank, Member FDIC, of more than 1,400 Americans ages 18+ who are married or in a serious relationship. The survey found money (36 percent) caused the most stress on their relationship. Younger adults (age 18-54) were almost twice as likely (44 percent to 23 percent) to cite money as the top stressor than older adults (55+).

A slightly larger proportion of Americans in a serious relationship felt money was their biggest stressor compared to married Americans (38 percent vs. 36 percent). Closely following money as a top stressor for married Americans was health at 17 percent. The second biggest stressor for Americans in a serious relationship was family at 13 percent.

"Marriage is a joyous event, but like any important milestone in life, planning is the key to success, especially when it comes to personal finances," said Diane Morais, president of Consumer and Commercial Banking Products for Ally Bank. "Open communication between the partners about how to spend and save money together can help establish a solid financial footing. It also is important to choose the right banking partner to achieve both short- and long-term financial goals."

Save Early and Often
Additional studies have found that more than half of married couples pay for their wedding out of their own pockets. This means budget conscious couples are looking for unique ways to save for a wedding, that on average can cost more than $30,000, according to The Knot, a leading online wedding resource. In addition to the wedding costs, couples also need to consider their honeymoon. The Travel Industry Association of America indicates the average honeymoon budget could be close to $4,000.

For those couples financing their own wedding and honeymoon there are several factors to consider when it comes to saving for the big day. For example, Ally Bank allows customers to nickname an Online Savings Account for a dedicated purpose, such as "weddings" or "Europe" for that destination wedding or honeymoon. Features of the Ally Bank Online Savings Account that make customers' money work harder include a competitive annual percentage yield that is up to 20-times the national average based on the savings account rates published in the FDIC Weekly National Rates and Rate Caps, accurate as of June 11, 2018. Plus, the interest compounds daily and has no minimum deposit requirement or monthly maintenance fee.    

"It is important to establish a budget and set expectations early," Morais said. "In addition, having a solid savings plan to cover the costs can relieve some of that stress."

Better Than Cash
The Knot also suggests a unique way many couples can pay for their special day is to ask friends and family to contribute to a special account in lieu of wedding gifts. While gift cards are common, more and more couples are setting up special accounts guests can deposit money into directly. Ally Bank offers its customers Zelle®, the fast, safe and easy way people use to send money to friends and family in minutes. All the customer needs to send money directly is the person's name and either a phone number or email address.

Yours, Mine, Ours
As the Harris poll indicated, the biggest stress for married and non-married couples is money. One aspect of money management couples must decide is how to divvy up bills, finances and budgeting. A recent Ally study of married couples under the same roof found that:

  • 4 in 10 share all income and expenses
  • 1 in 4 split household bills
  • 1 in 5 keep all income and expenses separate

Ally provides information and calculators to help couples budget and plan how to best cover household expenses.

"Ally Bank makes it easy for couples to manage their finances no matter how they split the family expenses," Morais said. "Couples can set up a joint account to pay bills and yet keep their own accounts for personal expenses and manage it all online or via their app. No matter how you manage your money, Ally has a solution for you."

Survey Method:
This survey was conducted online within the United States by The Harris Poll on behalf of Ally from May 29-31, 2018 among 1,473 U.S. adults ages 18 and older who are married or in a serious relationship. This online survey is not based on a probability sample and therefore no estimate of theoretical sampling error can be calculated. For complete survey methodology, including weighting variables and subgroup sample sizes, please contact Gene King at Gene.King@ally.com.

About Ally Financial Inc.

Ally Financial Inc. (NYSE: ALLY) is a leading digital financial services company with assets of $170.0 billion as of March 31, 2018. As a client-centric company with passionate customer service and innovative financial solutions, Ally is relentlessly focused on "Doing it Right" and being a trusted financial partner for its consumer, commercial, and corporate customers. Ally's award-winning online bank (Ally Bank, Member FDIC and Equal Housing Lender) offers mortgage-lending services and a variety of deposit and other banking products, including CDs, online savings, money market and checking accounts, and IRA products. Ally also promotes the Ally CashBack Credit Card. Additionally, Ally offers securities brokerage and investment advisory services through Ally Invest. Ally remains one of the largest full-service auto finance operations in the country with a complementary auto-focused insurance business, which together serve more than 18,000 dealer customers and millions of auto consumers. Ally's robust corporate finance business offers capital for equity sponsors and middle-market companies.

For more information and disclosures about Ally, visit https://www.ally.com/#disclosures.

Media contact:
Gene King, Ally
Phone: 980-312-8439
E-mail: Gene.King@ally.com

 

SOURCE Ally Financial

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