• The topic of how young Nigerians navigate romantic relationships with their earnings is a minefield of hot takes. In Love Currency, we get into what relationships across income brackets look like in different cities.


    Interested in talking about how money moves in your relationship? If yes, click here.

    How long have you been with your partner?

    We dated for a year and have been married for five. 

    How did you meet?

    We met at church. Moyo was the keyboardist, and I was a chorister. I can’t remember exactly when or how we started talking; it was just the usual friendly greetings you exchange with someone you work with on the same team. We saw each other on the weekends at rehearsals and during church service, but I didn’t register him in my brain as a romantic prospect.

    Then, in 2019, the church organised a send-off for Moyo when he was moving to a different state for work. Moyo asked me to wait behind, saying he wanted to discuss something with me. The discussion turned out to be a love confession. I remember thinking, “So why didn’t you tell me since? Is it now that you’re relocating?”

    I’m screaming. TBH, I get you

    Right? We had the opportunity to explore a relationship while we were together in the same place. Now, you want to rope me into the wahala of long-distance. I told him I needed some time to think. But while I didn’t give him a response for three months, that didn’t discourage him. He kept checking in, updating me about his day and making sure we got to know each other. 

    At some point, I was like, this guy isn’t half bad. He’s handsome and obviously into me. Let’s try it out. So, I stopped doing shakara and agreed to a relationship.

    Was navigating a long-distance relationship as tough as you expected?

    It wasn’t, actually. It helped that I travelled to see Moyo at least once every month. Each trip cost at least ₦20k to and fro, and he paid for them. I was a corps member, and he had a proper job.

    He also handled my hotel bills, food, and any outings we went on when I visited.

    The long-distance situation didn’t last long. We got married a year after we started dating, and I moved in with him. It’s been five years, and we have a child now. 

    Get More Zikoko Goodness in Your Mail

    Subscribe to our newsletters and never miss any of the action

    How do you both run the home’s finances?

    It has mostly been a joint effort, but I’ve taken on at least 70% of the finances over the past year. I recently got a job that pushed my salary to ₦150k more than my husband’s — he earns ₦300k. On top of that, his office has been battling some financial and management issues. They’ve paid staff only 50% of their salary for almost a year. 

    The solution would’ve been to find another job, but he can’t leave till the end of the year for some legal reasons. So, his take-home pay has been around ₦150k for a while. Before, Moyo contributed 60% of our ₦1m rent, paid school fees and part of the bills, and gave me ₦60k monthly to contribute to the food expenses. 

    But I now handle 100% of the food bills, utilities and school fees while he tries to save whatever’s left of his salary after removing transportation. These savings go towards rent. 

    Is there a budget for dates and gifts?

    There’s a limit to how much we can go out, especially with a toddler who believes he was created to gum body with me. So, the most we do regarding dates is family visits to restaurants or buying each other clothes. There’s no budget for that; it happens when we think about it. Money has been tight these days, so I can’t remember the last time we went out. 

    However, we always go all out for each other’s birthdays. We both like surprises, so you can find us saving secretly for months to surprise the other with cake, food and balloons on their birthday. I don’t think we even deliberately buy gifts; we focus more on the experience and making each other feel special. 

    I spent close to ₦100k on food, decorations and picture frames for his last birthday. I didn’t tell him how much I spent, though. He’d ask why I spent so much considering our current situation.

    What kind of money conversations do you both have?

    We’re always discussing bills, how much we should save to cover an expense, and what we can afford to buy at a particular time. 

    However, since his work issue started, Moyo has been touchy about money matters. If I make certain financial decisions (as small as buying fuel) without carrying him along, he’ll imply that it’s because I don’t have to ask him for money. On the other hand, if I tell him we need to buy fuel, he’ll imply I’m trying to make him feel bad about his finances when I know he’s broke. It gets exhausting sometimes. 

    Hmm. Have you talked to him about this?

    I’ve complained about his new attitude several times, and every time, he apologises, promises to do better, and asks me to be a bit more patient with him. Still, nothing really changes. It has been the recurring cause of our fights for a while. Some of these fights got so intense that we had to involve his parents. Last month, I consciously decided to stop complaining because I sense he’s just insecure. 

    I’m not a man, but I can understand how hard it must be for a man to feel like he can’t provide, especially for someone like my husband, who can drop his last kobo on his family. So, I’m just learning to understand, be patient, and pray for things to get better soon. 

    Fingers crossed. You mentioned Moyo has savings. How about you?

    His savings aren’t exactly savings because they’re primarily for rent. I try to save at least ₦20k monthly towards our emergency fund. We currently have about ₦200k in the account, and it’s our backup in case anything happens. 

    I’d love to save more, but between all the responsibilities on my neck — Abuja is crazily expensive — it’s a miracle I even have anything left. 

    What’s your ideal financial future as a couple?

    I want us to own our home someday. With this economy, it feels like an impossible dream because how many years do we want to save before we can afford a house?

    Interested in talking about how money moves in your relationship? If yes, click here.


    *Names have been changed for the sake of anonymity.


    NEXT READ: She’s 5 Years Older Than Her Boyfriend, and She Misses Being Spoiled

    [ad]

  • The topic of how young Nigerians navigate romantic relationships with their earnings is a minefield of hot takes. In Love Currency, we get into what relationships across income brackets look like in different cities.


    How long have you been with your partner?

    We’ve been together for four years and married for two.

    How did you meet?

    We met in the comments section of an Instagram Live during the COVID lockdown. The IG Live was a competition—I can’t even remember the reward—but I noticed Lydia kept trying to win. I checked out her profile, liked what I saw, and DM’ed her. 

    Lydia also recognised my username from the comments, so she responded. We had a good conversation that day, which subsequently became regular. After a few months of talking, we met at a mall. I brought her flowers and asked her to be my girlfriend. She accepted.

    Smooth!

    To be honest, I had the confidence to ask her out because I’d just gotten a job. After my NYSC, I was jobless between 2019 and the first few months of 2020, surviving on my parents’ goodwill and the small design gigs I got here and there. 

    But COVID brought remote work, and I landed a $200/week brand design gig on a freelancing site. I felt financially ready for a relationship. 

    What was Lydia’s financial situation?

    She was still a corps member, but her PPA paid well. Her salary plus the NYSC allowance brought her income to about ₦133k. 

    Lydia is a big saver, too. She used to complain about jumping buses to work in the morning, but when I suggested she take a cab, she’d be like, “With which money?” That babe could stretch ₦5k for a week and have ₦100k chilling in her account. She sort of infected me with her saving habits, too. 

    For instance, when we went on cinema dates, she’d insist we shared a pack of popcorn rather than buying two. I was the one paying, but she hated what she termed “unnecessary spending”. 

    Lydia would ask me to outline my expenses every week so we could track my spending and find out if I was overspending on certain things. We really worked well financially. That, among other reasons, made it clear that I had to marry her. We got married in 2022. 

    But I lost my job shortly after my wedding. 

    Damn. What happened?

    The startup I worked at folded three months after I started working with them. I joined after the agency I worked with on the freelance site didn’t need my services anymore. It seemed like a blessing in disguise because the new job paid ₦600k. I’d just moved my family to a ₦1.2m/year apartment when my employers asked me to go home. 

    I thought it was a bad dream. Like, we were just two weeks into the new apartment. I’d spent all my savings on the wedding and relocating to the new house. We had no bed frames or chairs in the sitting room — we gave away the old set in my old apartment because we thought we’d buy a new one. To top it all, Lydia had resigned from her job when they refused to give her time off for wedding preparations.

    Yikes. How did you both manage?

    We got about ₦300k in money gifts from the wedding and managed that for a while. My mother-in-law also sent us plenty of foodstuffs after the wedding, so we used that to see road. We got plastic chairs for the sitting room and slept on a mattress on the floor for months. Our friends thought we didn’t want them to visit because we were honeymooning. In reality, it was because we were crazy broke.

    We were also job hunting like mad but with little success. I should note something here: Lydia hardly nagged me. Of course, she wasn’t happy about our situation, but it was more like both of us complaining about our financial crisis rather than fighting each other. We approached the problem from an “all hands on deck” standpoint. 

    We knew we couldn’t afford unnecessary expenses like a Netflix subscription, eating out, or even eating chicken with every meal. We began a Sunday tradition of visiting our parents to eat dinner and take foodstuff home. I even pretended to prefer drinking garri at night so we could stretch meals for longer. We were in this situation for about seven months before Lydia got a job in 2023. Her salary was just ₦150k, but it was a lifesaver.

    Phew. How was your job search going?

    I applied to and interviewed at countless places but got nothing. I even abandoned the job search for a while and focused on getting freelance design gigs. But it was tougher to get foreign clients because no one trusted Nigerians. I got a few local design gigs that brought ₦15k or ₦20k occasionally.

    At one point, I thought I was being attacked spiritually. I knew several designers making serious money even as freelancers, but I was just stuck. I started taking prayers seriously. The whole situation affected my self-esteem and led to arguments between me and Lydia. 

    What kind of arguments?

    I constantly carried a “woe is me” expression, which affected our communication. I didn’t want to talk or joke because I didn’t find anything funny, but Lydia wasn’t having that. She was like, “We’re working out this money thing together, and I’m not complaining. Why are you letting it affect our relationship? Is it money you want or this marriage?” 

    I tried to explain that I didn’t feel comfortable without an income as the man of the house, but Lydia never accepted that as a valid reason. She also didn’t understand why I complained when she transferred money to my account to handle my personal needs — she knew I wouldn’t ask for money. I felt useless, and she thought I was too proud. 

    Our relationship really changed a lot. We went from talking about everything to sitting in silence for hours. It’s just funny because when people hear that a wife is feeding the husband, they expect the arguments will be about the woman feeling frustrated about taking care of the bills. In our case, our arguments were primarily due to my feeling sad for myself and allowing it to affect our communication. 

    My moodiness worsened when the time came to pay rent, and I couldn’t find any means to loan money to augment the ₦400k my wife had managed to save. We had to move to my brother’s boys’ quarter apartment. 

    Depression and shame almost killed me.

    I’m sorry you went through all that

    Thank you. For the rest of 2023, we survived on my wife’s salary and my brother’s kindness. We also had to get on birth control after having a pregnancy scare. Imagine giving birth while squatting in someone’s house. 

    Thankfully, things changed in May 2024. My brother helped me get my current job and gave us ₦400k to add to the ₦500k my wife had saved to get our own apartment. The house is still mostly empty, but we’re slowly getting the necessary furniture. I’m just glad that things are finally looking up.

    I’m happy about that as well. I hope your relationship is getting better too?

    Gradually. We aren’t as close as we used to, but I’m trying to make up for it by communicating more. At least, I can now afford to take us out to eat once a week. I couldn’t afford to buy her a Valentine’s gift this year — even though she swears she loves the love notes I gave her — and I look forward to finally being able to afford to buy her gifts next year. 

    What does your relationship budget look like now?

    The weekly dates don’t cost more than ₦10k. Besides that, I’ve told my wife I’ll handle all the household bills from now on. She can just save her salary for emergencies or do whatever she wants with it. Knowing her, she’ll probably just save it. 

    Have you considered planning for a safety net?

    Oh yes. I know better than just relying on one job now. I save at least ₦40k monthly for rent, and I’m actively looking for another job on the side. With another income source, I can look at investment options.

    What’s your ideal financial future as a couple?

    I really want us to own our house one day soon. Rent is such a huge expense, and once that’s out of the picture, I believe we can look at achieving other things.

    Interested in talking about how money moves in your relationship? If yes, click here.


    *Names have been changed for the sake of anonymity.


    NEXT READ: This Abuja Teacher Doesn’t Believe in Girlfriend Allowance

    Get more stories like this and the inside gist on all the fun things that happen at Zikoko straight to your inbox when you subscribe to the Zikoko Daily newsletter. Do it now!

    [ad]