Those aged 18 to 28 were also more inclined to consider concealing one's finances as bad, if not worse, than actual cheating.
Forty percent of U.S. adults who are in committed relationships admitted to committing some form of financial infidelity ...
A new survey finds 45% of Americans consider financial infidelity — keeping money secrets from a spouse or partner — to be ...
Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate.com, joins Lisa Dent to breakdown details pertaining to a survey that states ...
More than 3 in 5 Americans (62 percent) in committed relationships keep at least some of their money separate from one ...
Bankrate Senior Industry analyst Ted Rossman joins Wealth to discuss how couples can avoid financial infidelity in their relationships. According to Rossman, secret spending is the most common ...
Financial infidelity includes overspending, debt (past or present), having debit/credit cards, or having checking/saving accounts that your significant other doesn’t know about. Gen Z couples ...
Ironically, nearly half of those Americans (45 percent) believe that keeping financial secrets is as bad as physical infidelity. Learn what secrets they’re keeping and how to avoid money road ...