![]() “There are times where I feel a burden of having to work hard all the time to keep up with this lifestyle,” she said. Vora pays for their living expenses (as well as splurges, like upgraded flights), and they split most of the house chores like dishes and laundry. That didn’t arrive until they were engaged in 2021 and married the next year. “There was a period where I felt I was providing so much, and I didn't have that sense of 100% security that we were in this for the long term,” she said. ![]() In 2020, while they were dating, she bought a house and Knicky moved in. “It’s definitely had ups and downs,” Vora said. Their income gap has widened as their relationship deepened. ![]() “When you meet someone, and you’re falling in love with them, and you’re in your 20s - I wasn’t really thinking about what that difference would be like in years to come,” she said. At the time, she earned about $55,000 as a resident, roughly $10,000 less than Knicky was making as a full-time staffer, a gap that would reverse dramatically once she completed residency. Vora, 33, and husband Zach Knicky met about five years ago, when a woman delivered a baby in the ER lobby. She is one of the roughly 30% of wives who outearn their working husbands in the US, a growing and sizable minority of married households. As an obstetrician, Roma Vora earns over $300,000, roughly $235,000 more than her husband makes as an emergency room nurse working at the same hospital in Omaha, Nebraska. ![]()
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