Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 27
Lawyer Urges Cohabitation Agreements to Prevent £5,000 Furniture Disputes
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 27

Lawyer Urges Cohabitation Agreements to Prevent £5,000 Furniture Disputes

1 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 27

Summary

  • James Davies, a family lawyer at Blake Morgan, said unmarried couples should sign cohabitation agreements before moving in together to set out ownership and breakup terms for shared furniture and other assets.
  • Davies said the legal framework for unmarried couples is "grossly inadequate," and that hiring lawyers over furniture often costs more than the items themselves; he recommended mediation as a cheaper, less antagonistic route.
  • Real-life cases show the financial hit: one woman estimated she lost about £3,000 after a breakup, while another said she left behind nearly £5,000 of furniture and appliances she had partly funded.
  • The disputes are often shaped by storage limits, emotional attachment and reluctance to prolong contact, with a poll of 3,000 people finding one in five Britons aged 18-40 delayed a breakup because living costs were too high.

Insights

As cohabitation surges, why does UK law still fail to protect millions of couples from financial ruin after a breakup?
Is a legal agreement the new relationship milestone for couples moving in, or does it kill romance from the start?