Am I wrong for not wanting to contribute to my wife’s sister’s wedding?

A man drew a firm line when his sister-in-law asked for financial help to fund her dream wedding, insisting any contribution must come solely from his wife’s personal account—not his own or their joint funds. The request reopened old discussions about fairness, as his wife pointed out he had generously helped pay for his own sister’s big day years earlier.

He explained his past gift stemmed from a close bond and lifelong support from his sister, while admitting he feels no similar attachment to his wife’s sister. Though his blunt words—“I don’t care about her sister”—stung during the heat of argument, his wife eventually agreed to give a modest amount from her own money. Still, lingering tension leaves him questioning if his stance was wrong.

‘Am I wrong for not wanting to contribute to my wife’s sister’s wedding?’

A sister-in-law plans an extravagant wedding and turns to family for financial help.

My SIL is getting married next year and she wants a really expensive and picturesque wedding. She asked my wife if we could contribute to the wedding and she promised...

The husband sets clear limits on which accounts can be used.

I told my wife she could contribute with her individual account, but I wouldn’t contribute with my account, and I wouldn’t be comfortable if she used the joint account.

My wife and I had a lot of discussions on it and my wife told me it was unfair that I contributed a lot to my sister’s wedding and gave...

Past generosity toward his own sibling becomes the flashpoint in the debate.

I then told my wife that I did so because I love my sister and she helped me a lot growing up. I told my wife upfront that I don’t...

That came off a bit harsh but I was a bit angry because my wife was questioning why I contributed to my sister’s wedding. Was I wrong?

My wife ultimately agreed with me and she is going to contribute to her sister’s wedding with her personal account, but it’s not going to be a lot.

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Wedding finance requests often strain family relationships, exposing differing views on obligation, reciprocity, and personal bonds. The husband’s distinction—generous with his own sibling due to deep history, yet unwilling toward his wife’s—reflects individual emotional ties rather than mandated equality across in-laws.

What makes the story more complicated is the interplay of separate versus joint finances in marriage. Many couples treat gifts to family as coming from the sibling’s personal resources, preserving neutrality in shared accounts. Expecting equivalent contributions regardless of relationship closeness can breed resentment. Additionally, promising repayment for luxury events rarely materializes reliably, turning “loans” into gifts.

Culturally, modern weddings have ballooned in cost, fueling entitlement around crowdfunding dreams beyond one’s means. Yet traditional etiquette holds that couples fund their own celebration—or scale it realistically. His directness, while harsh in delivery, upheld transparency about boundaries rather than passive agreement followed by regret.

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Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Most users supported the husband, emphasizing personal choice in gifting and rejecting obligation.

No_Interview_2481 − I never understand people expecting other people to pay for their wedding. If you can’t afford it, you don’t have the extra extravagance.

Potential_Stomach_10 − Did wife or joint account contribute to your sister's wedding ? Definitely harsh, but depending on context and history, you may not be wrong.

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TaylorMade2566 − Call me crazy but I think if you can't afford an expensive wedding, you don't have one.

I think both of you should've said no but to your question, if you didn't use joint funds for your sister's wedding, your wife shouldn't be either.

Ginger630 − I don’t think you’re wrong at all. You used your own personal account to pay for your sister’s wedding. Your wife can do the same. She didn’t pay...

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But if someone can’t afford an extravagant wedding, then they shouldn’t expect others to pay for it. Either pay for the wedding you can afford or push the wedding back...

witchymoon69 − Why does your wife expect you to contribute when she didn't contribute to your sister's wedding. Tell her it's the same offer that you did . .... She...

Competitive_Sleep_21 − I think it is weird to have a big wedding and expect others to pay for it. So many better uses for money.

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Several highlighted practical realities around repayment and fairness.

Lilac-Roses-Sunsets − Not wrong. Your wife is free to spend her money on her sister. I think your wife knows that the sister is NOT going to pay back in...

LaLaLaLaLaLaLaLaLa- − NW. Her sister. Her money. Since when do people need to plan these extravaganzas that are so obviously beyond their means and then expect crowdfunding? ?

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One sought clarification on past funding sources.

witchymoon69 − I have another comment. ...why is it that couples who save $50k and have a nice wedding that they paid for are expected to foot the,

bill for a sibling who hasn't saved any money because it's not fair they had a nice wedding and they want one too !!

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Or they save $10k and want someone to foot the bill for a $80k wedding of their dreams . ... Because it's their vision. I feel you should have the...

No one is responsible for paying for your wedding. My husband and I saved $100k . Instead of blowing that we had a court house wedding and used the money...

Freedom_Isnt_Free_76 − I think it's wrong for couples to expect anyone to fund their wedding but themselves. This nonsense about Instagram weddings needs to bite the dust.

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The community largely agrees the husband isn’t wrong—weddings should be self-funded within realistic budgets, and personal gifts reflect individual relationships rather than enforced symmetry. His boundary protected shared finances while allowing his wife autonomy with her own money.

Do you think couples should match financial help equally for both sides of the family? Have you ever faced pressure to contribute to a relative’s big event you couldn’t afford? How do you handle differing closeness levels with in-laws when money requests arise?

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