What feels sweet can become bitterly costly
Many couples say they will celebrate Valentine’s Day in a simple way. But when 14 February arrives, restaurants are full. Flowers cost more than usual. Social media shows hotel stays, surprise gifts and fancy dinners.
A few days later, reality returns. The credit card bill arrives. The bank balance looks smaller. The issue is not love. The issue is expectation.
Love and spending are often mixed
In many relationships, spending becomes a way to measure effort. A bigger gift can look like deeper love. A simple dinner can feel “not enough.”
This belief creates pressure. Even couples who agree to keep things simple sometimes spend more than planned. No one wants to look careless or unromantic. Over time, one expensive celebration sets a standard for the next one.
The numbers are real
Consider a young employee earning between P25,000 and P35,000 a month. After rent, utilities, transportation, food, and family support, there is not much left.
A Valentine’s dinner for two can easily cost P3,000 to P5,000. Add flowers, a gift, transportation, and the total may reach P6,000 or more. That amount can cover groceries for a week or part of a monthly savings goal.
If paid through a credit card in installments, the spending does not disappear. It simply moves into future months.
When occasions multiply
Valentine’s Day is only one date. There are birthdays. Anniversaries. Christmas. Travel plans. If each occasion must be “better than last time,” the spending slowly increases.
Without a clear conversation about money, silent expectations grow. One partner may assume the other should always pay. Another may feel pressured to give beyond their budget. These unspoken rules create stress, not romance.
The real test of a relationship
Strong relationships are not built on one expensive evening. They are built on shared goals, honesty, and financial stability.
Money problems are one of the most common sources of conflict for couples. This is especially true when planning for bigger responsibilities like housing, children, or supporting parents.
A healthy relationship includes healthy money conversations. It is not about being stingy. It is about being aligned.
After the flowers fade
Valentine’s Day lasts for a day. Financial consequences can last months. The question is not whether you celebrated. The question is whether your spending matched your real capacity.
Did your celebration strengthen your connection or quietly weaken your finances? When you look at your recent spending, did it reflect love… or pressure?
In your relationship, are money expectations clearly discussed, or silently assumed?