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Life after divorce: Women, and the art of starting over

Mint New Delhi

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November 13, 2025

When marriage ends, women face deep turmoil—it’s also a chance to regain financial control

- Anagh Pal feedback@livemint.com

When a marriage ends, the emotional and financial ground shifts overnight, pushing life into an unfamiliar and often unsettling phase. For many women—often the silent CFOs of their households—the real shock comes not from the separation itself, but from realising how little time and attention they've given to their own financial security. It’s a wake-up call that forces a deeper look at money matters, a reassessment of priorities, and a renewed focus on building long-term stability and independence.

Yet with the right structure, guidance, and emotional support, rebuilding one’s financial life is not only possible but deeply empowering. And when women take charge early, even life’s toughest transitions can become a turning point toward lasting confidence and control.

Prepare now, protect tomorrow

Financial preparedness doesn’t begin after a crisis—it starts the day you earn your first paycheck. From operating your own bank account to consciously saving and investing, independence must be cultivated early.

“Every woman should track her income and expenses, set aside a portion for savings, and steadily build her own corpus—not as a safeguard against marriage, but as confidence in herself,” said Neha Mota, co-founder, Finnovate.

Even after marriage, women should continue maintaining individual bank accounts and investments while holding two joint accounts with their partner—one for expenses and another for investments. This encourages transparency and clarity for both partners, while personal accounts give women financial freedom to spend and save independently.

Even gifts—money or jewellery—should be managed prudently.

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‘Rise in earnings can bring FIIs back, elevate India’s global standing’

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The ultrarich are spending a fortune to live in extreme privacy

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Satellite internet firms may see fee cut for remote areas

Discount would apply to 5% annual spectrum charge that DoT plans to levy on the firms

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Ravindran moves NCLT on TLPL deal

Riju Ravindran has moved the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) against the compulsory convertible debenture agreement between Think & Learn Pvt. Ltd (TLPL) anda wholly owned subsidiary of Glas Trust Co., edtech firm Byju’s US-based financial creditor, alleging it to be violative of foreign direct investment (FDI) and Foreign Exchange Management Act (Fema) regulations.

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Resilience spells hope as uncertainty reigns high

As trade-policy turmoil prolongs global uncertainty on an IMF index, we have some bright spots too. India should consider shifting focus from supply-side policies to demand stirrers

time to read

2 mins

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