- Draw up a deed of trust with a power of sale. This means sale of the property can't be blocked by one party if you fall out or the person disappears without a trace.
- Decide whether you'll be joint tenants (the property is then owned 50:50 and passes automatically to one if the other person dies) or tenants in common (each owns a different share, so the person bringing in the larger salary can take a bigger share of any gains - and losses).
- Make wills. If one co-owner dies without having made a will (intestate), the remaining person will have no rights over that person's share of the property.
- Put both names on the deeds. And if a new housing arrangement is set up by the individuals after one already owns the property, the lender has to be informed.
If you and your partner aren't married and decide to buy a house together, it's important to realise there's no such thing as a common law wife or husband (except in some extremely obscure exceptions). In the absence of any other legal agreements, if you're not married the law sees you as two distinct individuals with no call on each other's money. That means if the utility bills are in your name, you're ultimately responsible for paying them. And if you pay into a savings account in your partner's name, the money's legally theirs. The solution is to draw up a cohabitation agreement. This will set out who's contributing what, who's responsible for which bills and what happens if you split up or have a serious disagreement about money. For day-to-day concerns, such as paying utility bills, sit down and talk it through. If one of you earns more than the other, for example, will that person pay a larger proportion or will you split the bills 50:50, with the richer one paying for more of the treats? A good solution is to open a joint current account, but it's important you both agree what the money is to be spent on. Spending the money on an expensive box of Belgian chocolates instead of paying a gas bill is sure to start a row.
|
|
|