Man Claims He’s Entitled to Equity in Girlfriend’s House Since He Does Most of the Housework, Leading To a Legal Dispute When She Demands He Signs a Prenup

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    I gave him the agreement, which basically said I keep the house and doesn't owe spousal support in the event of a breakup. We got in a big fight because my partner wants to have equity in the house because of the housework he does.
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    WIBTA if I do not give my partner equity in the house in exchange for housework?
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    This dispute involves the following parties: Me (33F) and my partner (36M). Throwaway! I have a good corporate job; I bought a townhouse 7 years ago when I was single. Met my
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    partner 3 years ago. He moved into my townhouse. Pays occasional (well below market value) rent, buys occasional groceries. I cover well over 80+% of the expenses. My partner is a PhD student. When he moved in
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    with me he cut a LOT of expenses. He no longer had to work his part time job to pay his rent in a shared apartment with 4 other guys. My partner does do more housework than I (60/40
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    split), and he cooks more often (65/35). I do not mind this arrangement; I care about him deeply and we generally get along well and have a caring relationship.
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    The issue is this: I am selling my townhouse and buying a house. I am fronting the entire cost, and am the only one on the mortgage. Before we move in, I asked my partner to sign a
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    cohabitation agreement (basically a prenup for non married people). I gave him the agreement, which basically said I keep the house and doesn't owe spousal support in the event of a breakup. We got in a big fight
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    because my partner wants to have equity in the house because of the housework he does. I think this is unfair. I know enough divorced couples to know you should always plan for the future.
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    I'm worried about having to sell the house if we break up in order to pay him out. Am I crazy? AITA if I stick to my gis?
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    EDIT: a few people are asking why this is even an issue if we aren't married. In my jurisdiction, if you cohabitate long enough you are considered common law spouses.
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    We are getting to the point where if we break up, he would have a lot of the same rights as he would if we were married.
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    East Parking8340 ⚫16h ago. Colo-rectal Surgeon [36] 60% of the housework does not equal half a home. That's called pulling your weight (except he doesn't as his financial contribution is close to zero). How utterly ridiculous of him.
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    He's 36 and a PHD student. As soon as he moved in he stopped working as much (really bad sign) but I'd bet everything that he doesn't use that additional time to speed up his PHD. By the time he gets it he'll be lucky if he's 40, then what? His resume will be so c. , ру
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    that he won't get a high paying job, he'll just keep on leeching from you. You have subsidised his life since before he moved in and he just sees you as a money tree. He's put no cash towards it whatsoever and will not put any money towards it in the future.
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    You'd be a complete and utter idiot if you allowed him any type of legal toehold on your property. Frankly, you'd be an absolute dunderhead if you maintain a relationship with such a user. NTA
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    Throwawaygirl3719... OP 16h ago This is very well put. Thank you.
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    Mikey3800 12h ago Ah le Enthusiast [7] INFO: by housework, do you mean cleaning the house etc or repairs to the house? Either way, he doesn't deserve equity unless he made large improvements on the house that caused it to be able to sell for more money.
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    Throwawaygirl3719... OP 12h ago Cleaning. I do all the improvements and repairs.
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    Tiny_Brush_7137 • 16h ago Somebody should write this from a male perspective and all the comments will be YTA. If he's your partner there should be a way for him to build together with you.
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    I agree with you getting a co habitation agreement signed, but a better approach may be where you each get back whatever down payment you put in (include all closing costs), then split the equity.
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    Make sure he pays his share, which might not be 50% if your income is significantly higher but don't get taken advantage of on the month to month. Does this guy have any career prospects or his he a career student? Kick him in the a- he's 36 it's time for a real job.
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    Throwawaygirl3719... OP • 16h ago Yes this is what I'm worried about, and why I'm asking. Is it only fine bc I'm a woman? To be clear, he is not putting anything financial toward the house. I'm just not sure how what a
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    fair way to build together is, like you say. It's hard to strip a balance. Thanks for your perspective!
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    ninjastarkid 16h ago • A hle Enthusiast [6] The way my mom did it, is when she got married to my father she signed a contract and bought half of the house from him. Idk if she paid right away or over time (she was a single mother of a teenager).
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    It was for different reasons but maybe a similar arrangement could work. I don't think doing all of the chores would even equal the value of a house. I mean what you'd pay a cleaning lady a $100 to clean it
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    every week theoretically. Maybe a teenager $20 to mow the lawn. $100 for repairs here and there unless a remodel is required. That is nowhere near the cost of a house
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    Throwawaygirl3719... OP 16h ago Thanks for your perspective. That's something that might work!

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