AITA for not explaining to my daughter her father didn’t pick his wife over her?

How do you react when an adult child expects a larger inheritance than planned? One mother found herself caught between her ex-husband’s practical will and their daughter’s feelings of being sidelined.

Inheritance decisions often stir deep emotions in families. The father wants to secure his current wife’s future after her sacrifices. His daughter sees it as choosing the wife over her. The mother declined to mediate, leaving everyone questioning fairness and entitlement.

‘AITA for not explaining to my daughter her father didn’t pick his wife over her?’

The situation begins with unusual behavior from the daughter during a visit.

Hello I could use some perspective here. I have a daughter with my ex-husband. Our daughter is now 27. She's always been closer to me than her dad but they...

While talking her dad tried calling her several times and she declined the calls. Her fiance then got a call from him, he answered, told him to f-off and hung...

She told me they went to visit him for a couple days and while there he went over his will and insurance payout (if applicable) with her so she knew...

Apparently the bulk of his money and insurance, and the house he built is being passed to his wife while our daughter would get things like his parents' house (needs...

The ex-husband reaches out for help, revealing his reasoning.

Yesterday my ex called me to ask to help him with our daughter. I asked him if what she said was true and it was.

His reasoning was that his wife left her family and job behind to move with him to their state to help him take care of his mother in a town...

He's had some injuries and illnesses during their marriage and his wife has been supportive of him and took care of him when he needed it so he wants to...

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I can kind of see his point, but I also see our daughter's. Where I might have messed up was telling him I wouldn't help him with our daughter.

While his reasoning makes some sense, his decisions have consequences. When I got off the phone, my husband shook his head.

I asked him what he was shaking his head at and he told me I need to mother my daughter because right now she's acting spoiled and throwing away her...

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I didn't think I was wrong to decline but he and I are almost always on the same page so now I'm wondering.

The conflict arises from mismatched expectations around inheritance. The father prioritizes his spouse’s security after her sacrifices. The daughter interprets the division as devaluation. The mother remains neutral, viewing the fallout as natural consequence.

Emotional factors include the daughter’s sense of rejection tied to parental divorce dynamics. The father focuses on gratitude and partnership obligations. The mother’s stance reflects detachment from co-parenting an adult. Empathy gaps widen as greed perceptions clash with care acknowledgments.

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Estate planning attorney Martin Shenkman has written that “spouses typically receive primary inheritance to maintain lifestyle, while children often get remainder interests or specific bequests” (from wealth management guides). This standard approach applies here. Unspoken assumptions fueled the rift.

Encourage private reflection on gratitude versus entitlement. Suggest family discussion facilitated by a neutral advisor if desired. Model healthy boundaries by focusing on relationships over assets. Support independent adult choices without forced mediation.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Social media users largely criticized the daughter’s reaction as entitled, while debating the mother’s refusal to intervene. Opinions split on whether she should guide her adult child.

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Many commenters labeled both mother and daughter as wrong for enabling entitlement.

Ok_Improvement_4436 − YTA and so is your kid.   Children are not entitled to an inheritance. They should be greatful they're getting anything.

I don't see how its unreasonable to make sure your current partner is taken care of in the event of unfortunate circumstances.

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Your child is going to ruin their relationship over this and you're going to let them. The Father should remove her from everything and see how she likes that.

[Reddit User] − Sorry but usually, where there is not a will, the bulk of assents goes to the wife and the rest divided by the living children. I mean...

Indeed your daughter acted as a spoiled brat, ‘sorry I only got one house and vihacles and other assets… but I wanted TWO houses’ like really. You made mistake when...

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Or you should have told your daughter this so something between the two of them and you wanted out. Or ‘be grateful for x and y’ cause what are YOU...

seandc121 − YTA and your daughter is a spoilt adult baby. She is not entitled to a single penny from her dad. And I hope him and his wife do...

People can choose to do what they want with their money, and of course he is going to want to make sure his wife is taken care of. Acting the...

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slackerchic − YTA and your daughter is acting like an entitled brat. She's getting a whole ass house AND cars and that's not enough? ? She want to rob the...

ssddalways − YTA you don't seem to have an issue with your ex, actually you have stated he has had a good relationship with your daughter so why wouldn't you...

And your daughter is young enough to build up her own assets instead of wanting to profit from her father's death while the woman who has given up everything has...

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I have told my own mother to spend all her money, sell everything and live a glorious last few years because I'm a grown ass adult who isn't wanting to...

Kessed − YTA In what world would your daughter get things if there is a living spouse? That’s how this works. It’s not like her dad is 80 and is...

He has obviously build a life with his wife and it’s totally expected for him to leave his stuff to his wife. Your daughter sounds super entitled and you should...

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SnooRadishes8848 − YTA, and helping your daughter act entitled

deefop − YTA, though gently. Honestly your daughter is the *major* a__hole here, and that piece was clear when you said that your ex husband is planning to leave his...

I'm not personally counting on inheriting a dime from my parents(though I likely will), and the notion that I'd decide to hate them because they aren't leaving me like millions...

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The only reason I'm saying you're an a__hole is because, regardless of the fact that your daughter is ostensibly a full grown adult(though acting like a spoiled child),

it wouldn't hurt you to have a conversation with your daughter to help her put things in perspective and not hate your ex husband. Clearly your current husband agrees, right?

But honestly there's a part of me that thinks this will be a wake up call for your ex. If your daughter doesn't stop being horrible he might just cut...

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Others defended the mother’s neutrality or focused on the daughter’s entitlement.

Tlns4d − NTA for not helping the ex but I am curious OP are you cutting out your current husband a leaving it all to your daughter ? Is she...

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runedued − YTA. Being a parent means helping your kid understand when they are wrong. Don’t act like this isn’t a pissing contest for you.

CatchMeIfYouCan09 − Eh. .. Your kid is TA tbh. Entitled too. Adults continue to live. And when that happens new spouses inherit their crap. Children aren't entitled to anything. It's...

Miliean − No one is entitled to an inheritance. He could leave everything to charity if he wanted. All of that money belongs to him and he gets to 100%...

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Any anger your daughter feels there is entirely unjustified and totally selfish. It's his money, it's his choice and she should be thankful that she's getting anything at all. Your...

Having said that, nta, you are under no obligation to parent your daughter anymore, she's an adult and is free to act entitled if she wants to. You are not...

A few sought more details or offered balanced views.

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Chocolatecandybar_ − INFO: I'd like to know if you're in the US before answering because inheritance changes place by place.

Somewhere the partner gets most of it, somewhere it's evenly split, somewhere you can give it all to whoever you want, somewhere there is a part that you can't take...

What I want to say is that there is country where your daughter would be rightfully entitled to the inheritance and others where she would be considered a brat.

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Also, as you didn't know what was going on between them, I would also question if that's it or if your daughter has some reason to resent the wife and/or...

[Reddit User] − Nah. I don’t think it’s your responsibility to mediate your adult daughter’s relationship with her father. I definitely see her father’s POV.

Elder care is BRUTAL and if his wife is doing all the heavy lifting, she’s definitely entitled to a large share of his assets. She’s also more than likely going...

If “ his assets “ are in fact assets he was able to get because of her labor, then she’s entitled all the more. Really the only person out of...

Are THEY going to take care of his mother? Is she going to take care of her father? Did she help build her father’s assets? If not, she needs to...

This case exposes raw feelings around legacy and loyalty. No one owes an inheritance, yet expectations persist. The father’s choice honors partnership sacrifices. The daughter’s hurt reveals entitlement risks damaging bonds permanently.

Takeaway stresses gratitude over guarantees. Relationships outlast assets. Guiding adults gently preserves ties without forcing reconciliation. Would you explain the father’s side to your child in this scenario? When does parental neutrality become enabling poor behavior?

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