If she controlled or still controls the money, the bills, or your paycheck—you were financially trapped.Now it’s time to take that power back.
Separating your finances isn’t just about money. It’s about freedom, safety, and building a future she can’t sabotage.
“The moment you start protecting your wallet, you start protecting your life.”
Signs You’ve Been Financially Abused
She made you ask for money
She stopped you from working
She tracked your spending
She opened credit cards in your name
She drained joint accounts
She used your money to threaten, punish, or trap you
This wasn’t “money problems.” This was control.
Step 1: Open a Private Bank Account
Open a new checking and savings account—at a bank she’s never used.
Use a new email and phone number
Set mail delivery to a PO box or trusted address
Ask the bank to place a verbal password on your account
Keep a small emergency cash stash outside the bank if possible
Pro tip: Use credit unions—they’re often more flexible with survivors.
Step 2: Remove Yourself From Joint Accounts
Joint accounts = open doors to sabotage.If she’s violent, manipulative, or reckless, close the door now.
✅ Options:
Ask the bank to freeze or close the joint account (some require both signatures—start the process early)
Transfer your portion of the funds to your new account
Document every transaction—print or save statements before leaving
Don’t tell her first. Make the move, then protect the paper trail.
Step 3: Secure Your Income
If she had access to:
Your direct deposit
Your work login or W-2s
Your business accounts
Here’s what to do:
Change your direct deposit to your new account
Alert your employer to remove her access and update contact info
Get your own tax transcripts from the IRS
Use a side hustle or under-the-table job if she sabotaged your main income
Step 4: Cancel Shared Cards, Subscriptions & Autopay
Cancel shared credit cards
Remove your info from Netflix, Amazon, Venmo, Uber, etc.
Check for auto-renewing charges tied to old accounts
If possible, switch phone carriers or change the plan
She might be tracking you through spending. Cut every cord.
Step 5: Pull Your Credit Report and Lock It Down
Go to AnnualCreditReport.com and check for:
Credit cards you didn’t open
Loans you didn’t take
Changes to your address or name
Place a fraud alert or credit freeze if anything looks off.Dispute false charges—even if you’re still living with her.
Step 6: Start Rebuilding Credit In Your Name
Open a secured credit card or credit builder loan
Use it only for essentials, and pay on time
Keep balances low—under 30% of your limit
Get added as an authorized user on a trusted friend or family member’s card (without giving them access)
Step 7: Document Every Financial Move
Why? Because if she accuses you of stealing, abandoning finances, or hiding assets—you’ll need receipts.
Save screenshots of balances
Print email confirmations of account changes
Keep paper or cloud backups of transactions
If you’re married, this also helps prove you’re separating finances legally—important for divorce or custody battles.
“Money is power. Take yours back—one account, one decision, one dollar at a time.”
Final Word
You don’t need her permission to reclaim what’s yours.She may have tried to break you financially, but now?You’re building your escape plan—and your comeback.


