The cultural script tells stay-at-home parents that they’re “partners” who “share everything.” That sounds lovely until a divorce, an unexpected death, or a long illness exposes the truth: the parent without W-2 income has almost no independent claim to the wealth they helped build. A written compensation agreement, signed by both spouses, fixes that gap. It isn’t unromantic. It’s the only document that treats unpaid domestic labor as the economic activity it actually is.
What the agreement should actually do
A household compensation agreement should specify a monthly amount transferred from the working spouse’s account to the at-home spouse’s individual account. Treat it like payroll. The number doesn’t have to match a market rate for childcare and household management โ though replacement-cost estimates from Salary.com put that figure north of $180,000 a year. What matters is consistency and ownership. The receiving spouse uses the funds to contribute to a spousal IRA, build personal credit history, and maintain an emergency fund in their name only. This isn’t squirreling money away. It’s making sure both adults in the marriage have an independent financial identity that survives a bad year, a bad diagnosis, or a bad outcome in court.
The risk you’re insuring against
Roughly 40 percent of first marriages end in divorce, and the rate is higher for second marriages. Even in functional partnerships, one spouse can become disabled, get sued, or die. In any of these scenarios, the at-home parent is suddenly negotiating with lawyers, insurance companies, or grieving in-laws while having little credit history, no recent income, and no clear paper trail of their contributions. Courts in equitable distribution states often do recognize homemaker labor โ but “often” is doing heavy lifting in that sentence. A written agreement, ideally referenced in or alongside a postnuptial document, removes ambiguity. It also forces both partners to articulate, in dollars, what the arrangement is worth.
Why couples resist โ and why those reasons are weak
The usual objection is that paperwork “introduces distrust.” The opposite is closer to the truth. Couples who can’t have an explicit conversation about money are the ones already in trouble; they just haven’t found out yet. Another objection: “We share everything anyway.” Sharing a joint account is not the same as the non-earning spouse having retirement contributions, credit history, and assets in their own name. Banks and the IRS treat individuals, not vibes. A third objection is cost. A basic postnuptial agreement runs $1,500 to $3,000 with an attorney, which is trivial compared to the leverage imbalance it prevents. None of this requires distrusting your partner. It requires acknowledging that institutions outside your marriage will eventually have a say.
The takeaway
Writing down what the at-home parent earns isn’t a vote of no confidence in the marriage. It’s a vote of confidence in the at-home parent’s continued financial existence. Run the agreement past a family-law attorney in your state, fund a spousal IRA, and let both partners hold real assets. The romance can survive a signature.
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