Take Control of Joint Accounts and Strengthen Your Credit

It’s Take Control Tuesday, and Mansa Musa is breaking down a topic many couples overlook: joint accounts — and how they can quietly limit your financial power.

Here’s the quick version:

  • Joint accounts help creditors, not couples.
    Two names mean two people to collect from — but it also means you share credit limits, utilization, and risk.
  • Your borrowing power is limited.
    Every person only gets so much credit capacity. When everything is joint, you cut that capacity in half. Keep accounts separate and you double what your household can do.
  • Real example:
    Mansa and his wife qualified for ten mortgages as separate borrowers — but only five if they applied together.
  • Protection matters.
    Joint accounts expose you to STD: spousal transmitted debt and even XSTD: ex-spousal transmitted debt.
    If a partner or ex stops paying? Your credit suffers too.
  • Ownership vs. credit are not the same thing.
    You can co-own a home or a car, but only one person’s credit report needs to hold the loan. That keeps the other partner’s credit free and strong.
  • Still want shared access?
    Make your partner an authorized user. They get the convenience — without the legal responsibility.

It’s simple, strategic, and protective.

For the full breakdown and real-life examples, listen to our full conversation below.

Randi Myles Online
Randi Myles Online
Take Control of Joint Accounts and Strengthen Your Credit
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