AITA for not wanting to pay for my step son to go to private school?

A woman faced backlash from her partner’s ex after revealing plans to fund private school for her biological daughter but not her 10-year-old stepson. She and her unmarried partner share 50/50 custody of his son from a previous relationship, and they have a younger child together.

The conflict ignited when the ex learned about the private school research and accused the stepmother of unfair treatment. Despite years of generously covering the stepson’s clothes, activities, holidays, and tutoring, the woman now draws a line at long-term savings, prioritizing her own child’s future while noting neither biological parent saves for the boy.

‘AITA for not wanting to pay for my step son to go to private school?’

The family setup involves shared custody and differing financial habits between the adults.

My partner and I have a child together and a 10 year old step son from his previous relationship (we aren’t married).

We have my step son 50% of the time and his mother the other 50% of the time. I earn more than my partner but not considerably more but I...

Since our child was born I have been putting money in to a savings account for her and will continue to do so towards a house deposit when she is...

My partner has not been putting any money aside for either child and neither has my step son’s mum.

The issue surfaced when plans for the biological daughter’s education became known to the ex.

Now that my step son’s mum has heard that we have been looking at private schools for our daughter she is accusing me of being unfair to her son.

Over the years I have paid for clothing, activities, holidays and a private tutor and treated him as I would my own but now this has caused a rift.

What adds complexity is the stepmother’s confusion over conflicting expectations placed on her role.

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I would love for him to have the same opportunities as my daughter but he has two parents and I can’t understand why it’s all up to me to save...

It’s confusing, as a step parent one minute you get told to treat them as your own and the next minute you get told not to overstep because you aren’t...

This situation highlights the delicate financial boundaries in blended families, particularly when parents are unmarried and custody is shared equally. The stepmother’s disciplined saving for her biological child contrasts sharply with the lack of planning from both biological parents, creating resentment when expectations shift onto her.

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Some argue she has already gone above and beyond by funding extras for the stepson over the years, and she owes no legal or moral duty to match savings for a child not biologically hers—especially without marriage tying her financially. Others point out potential emotional fallout for the boy and strain on the half-siblings’ relationship if disparities become obvious later.

In wider society, stepparent roles remain ambiguous: society often urges treating stepchildren equally in daily life, yet financial responsibility typically rests with biological or legal parents. Without clear agreements or marriage, expecting a partner to fund another person’s child long-term can breed entitlement. This case underscores the need for open discussions about money in blended families to avoid assumptions and protect individual priorities.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Most users strongly supported the woman’s position, emphasizing that the stepson’s future is his parents’ responsibility.

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different-take4u − NTA, ask them what they have been, and are doing, for their child’s future, then ask them why they aren’t pitching in for your child,

and see what they have to say. If they can expect something from you, can’t you expect the same in return?

CatCharacter848 − Tell them you'll match the amount they both have saved = £0 Seriously though stop paying for a child that isn't yours. His parents should.

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LizP1959 − NO NO NO! You are not the mother. You are not even married to the father. Legally you have no relationship to this child and no responsibility.

OP I would be on the lookout for other ways in which this man is trying to take advantage of you financially! ! He sounds like a Labor Digger to...

[Reddit User] − NTA. The kid is their responsibility, you are not a milking cow.

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Pale-Vehicle2067 − Stop paying for your boyfriend’s child.

A few offered balanced caution, focusing on the partner’s role and potential impact on the children.

l3ex_G − Nta this sounds like a partner issue. He should be saving for his children and he should be handling his ex and her expectations.

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As the step son though it’s probably going to hurt him when he finds out that his half sister was taken care of but he wasn’t. THATS ON YOUR PARTNER....

Randa08 − Nta but how do you have any respect for your partner? He's failed to provide for either of his children the way he should.

Others kept it straightforward and practical, reinforcing clear boundaries.

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NoOil7805 − I hope that money is only in your name!

unicorn67tf − NTA. Not your fault you're the only financially responsible person in the picture. Surprised your husband didn't stick up for you.

You've worked hard for your money and it always blows my mind that people feel so entitled to others' earnings. It sounds like you've been more than generous to your...

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Time for a chat that if they want to make private school happen for their kid, no one is standing in their way and they're responsible for making it so.

Send them a youtube video on savings accounts and how to save money effectively (interest rates, credit unions, etc). They truly want to give their son future opportunities?

That's great! But you're not their ATM. Your daughter should be humble and not brag (not that she is, just wanted to point that out)

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TALKTOME0701 − You don't treat him as your own and that's okay. He has two parents to do that. You are responsible for your child just as their responsible for...

Continue to save and provide the best life you can for your daughter. At the end of the day, you're really all she has. Since the two of you aren't...

But this is the part I don't get. When people have loose lips, and tell their ex partners things that are none of their business

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Ultimately, the woman stands firm on prioritizing her own child’s future with money she saved independently, while both biological parents have contributed nothing toward the stepson’s education fund. Community consensus leans heavily toward her right to set these boundaries, especially without marriage.

How do you navigate money and future planning in blended families—do you keep finances completely separate, or blend them fully? Would you continue funding extras for a stepchild if the biological parents weren’t saving anything themselves?

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