AITA for not wanting to help pay for my child’s University fees?

One coffee shop bombshell changed everything for a 40-year-old man: he has a daughter, Jane (18F), hidden from him since birth. Mom Grace (40F) admitted it was pure spite—no support, no contact, just silence. Jane reached out at 18 “to know her father,” but weeks later asked for full university fees. Dad can afford it, but sees a stranger with his DNA, not a child he raised. He’s ready to walk away.

The twist? Mom told Jane at 12, yet waited 6 years to connect—only when tuition loomed. Community split: some say he owes nothing, others urge partial help despite the scam vibe. Here’s the full DNA drama and the heated takes.

'AITA for not wanting to help pay for my child's University fees?'

Jane appeared with proof; dad confirmed via test.

I (40m) recently found out that I have a child, who we'll call Jane (18f).I wasn't convinced at first but everything checks out. When she came to me she told...

We talked for a while and I didn't really say much it but it was interesting. So after we talk for a while I ask about her mother, "Grace" (40f)...

Grace finally spoke—after three asks.

We have some small talk for while before I ask her why she never told me. Silence. I ask again. Silence. I ask a third time and she told me...

I point out that all she did deprive the child of a father. She says she does. I ask her when did she tell Jane. She says at age 12....

Grace says that she was angry that I wasn't present in her life. We talk some more about life before we say goodbye and go our separate ways. I don't...

Jane drops the real ask.

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So Jane and I spend the next week "bonding". Then she sits down and asks to talk. I say sure and sit down. Then she goes on to explain about...

Long story short she asks me to pay for her university fees. Now I am well off enough to pay for it without struggle. So I ask to see her...

I tell her that I'll think about it and she says thank you. So here's where I might be the AH. I don't want to pay for the fees because,...

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I mean she has had 6 years to firm a relationship with me and is only doing now that she needs something. I just want to wash my hands clean...

Dad draws the line.

I don't want Jane to think I'm her financial lifeline or anything like that.. So, Reddit AITA?. Edit to add some stuff because of the comments.. 1. I did a...

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2. Child support laws are different in my country in the sense that: A. You can't claim unclaimed child support if you had the option to claim it. B. Child...

3. Jane had the ability to contact me. I don't know how much influence her mother had on her choice but I do know that I was a dial away....

Dad robbed of 18 years by spiteful ex; daughter raised on half-truths, now seeks full funding. He sees user, not child; she sees long-lost dad with deep pockets. Legally, he’s clear—no retro support, no obligation post-18. Emotionally? A minefield.

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Dr. John Gottman warns unresolved resentment kills bonds—here, it’s a triple threat: dad vs mom, dad vs daughter, daughter vs absence. Practical path: offer a relationship contract, not cash. Meet monthly, no money talk for a year. If trust builds, fund one semester at a time, tied to effort (grades, communication). If not, walk guilt-free. Mom’s the villain; don’t punish the kid for her sins—but don’t reward the con either.

Long-term, Jane’s “meh” grades may reflect instability, not ability. A partial scholarship (e.g., housing only) could level the field without enabling. Dad gets agency; Jane gets chance. Or he closes the door—his right, her loss. Either way, therapy for all: he processes betrayal, she unlearns manipulation.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Split but leaning NTA—Grace is the true villain.

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[Reddit User] − NTA, but neither is Jane. Grace is a tremendous AH to both of you. I do encourage you to seriously consider contributing to Jane's university expenses (not...

Think about her position no father in her life and a mother who won't answer any questions she has for the first 12 years - then who knows what context...

I'll bet she never said "I never told your father about you because I wanted to spite him and I didn't care what effect that had on your childhood," despite...

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Jane had no way of knowing better, and you should be sympathetic to that. I don't think you're an AH no matter what you decide, just don't do anything to...

Innerouterself2 − NAH- she is a kid who just met her dad. University is the biggest thing on her mind and she says that dad has funds so why not...

If it was a year or two from now after yall have caught up so and formed a bond. .. It also sucks as you didn't get a shot but...

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If it was me- I would've said let's reset and not have this convo now as we are strangers. Let's become familiar and we can talk way down the road...

SlumberSlug − She was a teen who was manipulated by her mother. I highly doubt the mother would have allowed her to reach out prior. I don't think you should...

Also, while her grades may be underwhelming, she still deserves a chance to have more opportunities. If you are concerned about your relationship becoming strictly financial, I say have a...

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AmishAngst − I"m gonna say NAH, but there's a lot of other things in your post that do make you an AH. She was a 12 year old girl at...

and act like it's her own failing for not having six years of a relationship with you. That is unfair to her and it really sounds like part of your...

If you really need to place blame, then that's on her mother for putting the two of you in this position in the first place and not taking action to...

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No minor child should be contacting strangers on their own to engage in a parent-child (or any) relationship, and especially not when clearly not approved or facilitated by her custodial...

I also think it's an a__hole thing to look at (and judge) her grades as part of this decision making process. Especially when it's pretty clear that you have no...

It just comes off as petty and superficial. So, legally, you may not be obligated to do a damn thing. And if you don't want to help her, that's certainly...

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Some saw pure opportunism.

[Reddit User] − NTA. And you are totally right, this is not about a relationship with you, but with your money.

[Reddit User] − NTA. she is just a stranger with my DNA Yup. And one that wants to use you as a piggybank, no less.

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[Reddit User] − NTA. You were deliberately deprived of a relationship with your child. Now she/they (I'm assuming Grace probably pushed this on Jane) want money. That's just messed up,...

A few pushed partial help.

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happybanana134 − NAH except Grace. Grace lied to you and Jane; she caused this entire situation. Jane. ..I don't blame her for not reaching out until now. From what you've...

Uni fees. ..tbh I'd see that as getting off lightly given you never had to pay child support. Entirely Grace's fault, but as usual the child is the one who...

Some other comments from readers.

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MissSuzieSunshine − NTA at all for how you feel. Firstly, Im hoping you had a DNA test to be sure Jane is actually your child? Secondly, its understandable why Jane...

(especially as Grace admitted that she wanted to get back at you) so it could be that she was 'talking smack' about you to Jane all this time. Thirdly, its...

However, you also never had to pay child support for Jane all these years (and be aware that some States do award retroactive child support, even when the parent had...

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Additionally if you choose not to help Jane financially, chances are nil to none that she would choose to have a relationship with you going forward.

You say (now) that you just want to wash your hands of her and Grace, but 10 years from now will that still be the case? Either way, its your...

persian_hunter − NTA but she is a kid that was raised by a woman who had a Vendetta against you. It means 18 years of poisoning (if you are sure...

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Ask your self this am i Willing to risk loosing x amount of money to the chance of having a child. If the answer is yes so you might do...

[Reddit User] − YTA for the comment on her grades. Consider her grades might be meh because she had to grow up in a single family household. I’m sure she...

Kids with both parents involvement tends to have better grades. But now that I’m thinking if she did tell you sooner would you have even supported your daughter? What’s so...

Personally I would be ashamed to have someone of my biology walk thru this world with no proper care or guidance especially if you’re able to give it. To me...

superlosernerd − INFO: when you say “everything checks out”, does that mean you did a DNA test to make sure she is yours, and you’re not just being conned?

some_reddit_name − Cutting her out of your life because she dared ask for money would absolutely be an AH move. There isn't a ton else you can do as a...

structure it as a long term 0 interest loan with maybe some percentage being a performance dependent gift (since you asked for grades seems like this is smth you'd like).

caly_100 − I feel uniquely qualified to comment on this as someone who contacted their father for the first time at 18. My mom is a good woman but she...

I would imagine that Grace acted similarly if not much worse when talking to your daughter. Im going to say NAH except for Grace, and I think you should maybe...

or living costs and maybe if you continue to develop a relationship, take on more fiscal responsibility. I hope this helps and I hope you and Jane are able to...

Missicat − Hmmm. NTA. . but contributing some part would be a good thing. I don't understand folks piling on you. ...it's not like you knew about Jane and ran...

A vengeful mom created a fatherless daughter and a guilty stranger—now both want something. Dad owes nothing legally or emotionally after 18 years of lies. Community says: don’t pay to be used, but don’t slam the door out of spite. Offer time, not money—see if a real bond forms. Would you fund the future or close the account for good?

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