Life

This Many Millennials Would Rather Reveal Their Netflix Password Over Their Salary

by Alice Broster
Jayme Burrows/Stocksy

What you earn can be a deeply personal topic. With many people developing side hustles to supplement their main income and sites like Etsy and YouTube meaning monetising hobbies is a possibility, it may be a little bit tricky to work out what the person you're dating earns. But should you tell your date your salary?

Childhood, family life, work, and friends are all topics of conversation during dates, but I have a certain reluctance to tell the person I am dating what I earn. I'm not even sure why. However, a survey conducted on behalf of Wells Fargo Propel Card found that 54 percent of millennials would rather let their partners read their texts and emails than let them see their credit card statement. For so many people, including myself, finances are an important, everyday consideration — it's something we think about all the time. Yet somehow it still feels like salary and debt is too much of an intimate conversation to have on a first date. But is there ever a good time to reveal to your partner how healthy (or unhealthy) your bank account is?

Well, the Wells Fargo Propel Card study revealed that, in the first six months of dating, roughly one in three millennials indicated that they told each other their salaries (35 percent), and one in five indicated that they told each other the amount of credit card debt they have (22 percent). In contrast, 44 percent of millennials said they share their streaming passwords to their streaming services in just the first six months of dating.

So, millennials are more willing to handover their sacred Netflix and Amazon Prime passwords before they're willing to divulge what they bring home from work every month? It appears so.

A survey commissioned by the credit-reporting service Noddle questioned 2,000 Brits about when they thought it was the right time to ask a partner about their income. Only two percent said they would ask outright on a first date. Meanwhile, 19 percent said they would rather wait until they had officially become a couple, and 15 percent said they would wait even longer — that is, until they were moving in with their partner. Interestingly, 16 percent of male respondents said they would likely keep their bank statements close to their chest, compared to 10 percent of women.

Speaking about the survey to the Telegraph, Managing Director of Noddle Jacqueline Dewey, said: "As a nation we still shy away from talking about money, even with our spouse or partner.”

Nikita Sursin/Stocksy

So, are there benefits to being open and honest about your money situation from the start? Broaching the topic with a romantic partner can be tough, especially at the beginning, but My Fab Finance Founder Tonya Rapley revealed one solution that might work to Elite Daily: "If you're not serious with each other yet, set parameters and expectations for the types of dates you'll go on and what's expected of each partner (as far as their financial contributions go)."

Being on the same page as your potential partner is crucial if things are going to progress. While, at the start, this may only stretch as far as liking the same films, hanging out at the same coffee places, and having the same sort of ambitions, there is no getting away from the fact that money is important. Maybe income isn’t first date chat (I for one don’t think I am quite brave enough to broach the topic after meeting someone for an hour), but when you start looking at paying for holidays, renting a flat, or divy-ing up bills, it might be time to sit down with a cup of tea and your spreadsheets and reveal all.