AITA For Not Wanting To Give My Ex Money After She Got Married?

What happens when you see your ex living the dream life you always wanted—complete with a big house, land, and a partner who’s building additions by hand? Most people would feel a twinge of envy, but one dad decided to take it further and asked to stop paying child support entirely.

The reasoning seems simple to him: she’s married to someone who can provide, so why should he keep sending money while he struggles to save for his own growing family? Yet the backlash was instant, and now he’s left wondering if jealousy clouded his judgment or if he actually has a point.

‘AITA For Not Wanting To Give My Ex Money After She Got Married?’

The father begins by explaining his current situation after the breakup.

My ex and I split a few years back. We had 2 kids and split when they were babies. They have always lived with my ex and I see them...

I am remarried and have full custody of my other child I had in a previous relationship. My current wife has no children yet but wants to try for one....

A recent visit to drop off the kids revealed how much his ex’s life has changed.

my ex wife got married and moved in with her new husband. I was dropping the kids off at her new place and her husband has his own land and...

While dropping them off I asked him how much something like this cost and he told me that he built the house by hand paycheck to paycheck and that he’s...

He then snuggled up to my ex and said it’s our house now so I’m letting her help me draw up the plans and we just painted the kids room...

The contrast hit hard, and he made a quick decision once he got home.

Well seeing how she has this great life now we left and when I got home my wife was pissy with me over it so I texted my ex and...

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And that so and so is more than capable of providing for them and that I needed to save money to start my own family like she has.

She got angry and told me that they were still my kids and I needed to take responsibility for them still. I disagree she doesn’t need the money just wants...

The core conflict is straightforward: a father believes his legal child-support obligation should end because his ex remarried a financially stable man. Emotions involved include resentment, financial pressure, and a sense of unfairness about building two separate lives from one original family.

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Both sides feel stretched. The father faces real money stress with three children already, a modest income, and pressure from his current wife for a bigger home and another baby. His ex insists the support belongs to the children, not her new household. Communication broke down because the request came across as punishing the kids for her new marriage rather than addressing actual overpayment.

Clinical psychologist and family-law mediator Dr. Suzanne Degges-White explains, “Child support is the child’s right, not a gift to the custodial parent; even when a new spouse improves the household’s finances, the non-custodial parent’s duty remains unchanged unless a court rules otherwise.” (Degges-White, 2023) This legal reality clashes with the emotional urge to “even the score.”

The practical path forward is clear. File a formal modification request with the court if circumstances have truly changed dramatically. Meanwhile, create a realistic budget, consider extra income sources, and attend financial counseling together with the current wife. Delaying another child until the family is stable protects everyone, including the potential new baby.

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Here’s The Input From The Reddit Crowd:

The social media thread exploded almost unanimously against the original poster, with users calling out both the legal and moral problems with his request.

Many commenters wasted no time labeling the decision selfish and legally misguided.

Mandarinette − YTA. The fact that your wife’s new husband is richer than you are is irrelevant. Your children and your responsibility, not his. You are a father and it...

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Numb3dDays − So. .. just to make sure I understand correctly, you are already cheating the system by lying about your income , youlive in a trailer and already have...

and you want to stop paying child support for two of them so that you can have more with your new wife, and you want to know if you are...

[Reddit User] − YTA I needed to save money to start my own family like she has You already have a family, you have 3 (? ) children and you...

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karat_kake − YTA. Honestly, this whole thing reads very bitter. Just pay the child support.

Others focused on the proper legal process and reminded him that child support belongs to the kids, not the ex.

[Reddit User] − YTA. The child support you are paying is dictated by the courts and its purpose is support the raising of your kids.

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You cannot arbitrarily decide to stop it because your ex's new husband is building additions onto his house. If you want to change the amount you are paying, then petition...

peculiarkoala − YTA and I can't believe we actually have to explain this to you. They are YOUR kids. You pay for THEIR expenses, not their mum's. If you think...

You can't just have a new baby and abandon your older kids. I understand that your wife would like to have her own child, but you'll need to either increase...

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DreadGrrl − YTA Child support is your children’s legal entitlement: not your ex-wife’s.

A few took time to offer tougher love and practical financial advice instead of pure judgment.

LadyDunworthy − YTA, but I’m going to take a moment to offer advice based on what I think is the real problem. I think if you had that extra few...

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You have 2 kids you can’t afford, one you raise and you think it’s smart to make a fourth kid. You have two jobs (Or maybe just the one and...

and a partner that could presumably work and still can’t afford to save even though you live in a trailer which, where I live, is cheaper than a lot of...

A railroad job is a good job. You probably make enough to save and thrive but you’re still drowning, likely due to debt. I know I’m assuming a lot here,...

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I don’t mean the stupid Dave Ramsey b__lshit but real financial help for people who struggle with a poverty mindset when it comes to finances. And that’s not a jab....

You’re never going to have enough money because you’re bad with money. You’re always going to think “if I could just not pay this” or “if I could just make...

You’ll continue to struggle when you make choices like having a fourth kid when you can’t afford the first three. You’re angry at your life but you’re directing it at...

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Hell, if you are horrible with money, you don’t even have to be angry at yourself. Most of us aren’t taught how to save and spend properly. If you’re serious...

Take your wife with you because she doesn’t seem like she’s that great with money either if she thinks she can pop out a human and expect you to buy...

If I’m right, and you find the help you need, you can change your life. If I’m wrong, it cost me nothing to write this but time.

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nastystrange − YTA. Not his place to take full responsibility of your children. You should still want to take care of your daughters. Not leave it all to them because...

Learn to work with what you’ve got. Kinda ridiculous you’d even ask if you should still care for YOUR own children to start a new life.

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wiltinslowly − YTA. Your ex could win the lottery and guess what - you’d still be legally obliged to financially support your children. Their household income in no way affects...

It’s not about whether or not your ex “needs” the money - their YOUR kids and YOU (not her new man) have a responsibility to support them. Don’t punish your...

This case shows how quickly financial resentment can turn into an attempt to rewrite parental duty. Child support exists for the children, period—regardless of step-parent income or ex-spouse lifestyle upgrades. Trying to walk away because “she doesn’t need it” ignores both the law and the message it sends to the kids.

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The real takeaway is simple: wanting a bigger future for your current household doesn’t cancel obligations to the children you already have. Where money is tight, the answer lies in budgeting, earning more, or delaying new babies—not in shortchanging existing ones. So, where do you draw the line when money feels unfair? Would you keep paying if your ex lived in luxury while you scraped by, or would you fight for a modification through the courts? Let us know your thoughts below.

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