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Couples have legal obligations to disclose income, testify against each other, and have equal access to housing. Income affects eligibility for loans and grants. Couples may be required to testify for or against each other in court. Laws protecting unmarried couples are increasing. Married couples are obligated to support each other even after the relationship ends.
Some legal obligations a couple has during their life together are to declare each other’s income, testify against each other, and have a good chance of renting or buying housing. Disclosure of each other’s income when applying for loans or grants is important and usually required by law so that financial institutions can make an informed decision when deciding whether to grant the application. Some couples believe they don’t have to testify against each other if one partner does something illegal, but this isn’t true. Additionally, some countries prohibit discrimination against unmarried couples. Sometimes couples who live together also need to support each other after the relationship ends.
When they live together and are no longer financially dependent on their parents, couples usually have to consider each other’s income when applying for loans and grants. For example, they may no longer be eligible for certain grants because their combined income is above the income limit set for those grants. It is illegal to lie about the status of a relationship to get around a financial institution’s qualifications for loans and grants. In general, this issue may not matter if a couple lives together but still depends on family members to support them.
A widely recognized myth is that couples, especially married couples, cannot appear in court to serve as witnesses for the prosecution against their significant other. In some countries, a couple may be legally required to testify for or against each other if such a situation arises. Other countries, such as the UK, in some cases protect married couples from having to testify against each other. Typically, regardless of the country, couples can be forced to testify for or against each other if the case involves mutual violence or violence or sexual relations with a minor.
As unmarried cohabitation becomes more popular around the world, laws protecting unmarried couples become more plentiful. Depending on their jurisdiction, a couple may be legally required to have a fair chance to acquire housing. Landlords cannot legally discriminate based on a couple’s lack of a marriage certificate. However, in some jurisdictions, landlords are free to require that only married couples apply for housing due to religious or personal beliefs.
In many places, if a couple is married and living together, they are legally obligated to support each other even if the relationship dissolves. For example, a stay-at-home mother who divorces her husband will usually receive monthly payments to support the couple’s children and herself. Sometimes she is the woman who has to support the man because she has earned more money than he has.
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