AITA for refusing to pay for my in laws to come on vacation with me?
Money issues can quietly erode even the strongest relationships, especially when one partner feels they’re carrying more than their fair share. One woman has spent four years splitting household bills 50/50 with her partner — despite him earning 65% of the income and his children living with them regularly.
She’s already shouldered thousands in extra costs while he saves his surplus into his personal account for a future house near his ex-wife. When he proposed a weekend getaway that quickly turned into a family trip for his parents and adult brother, he offered only 60% coverage — leaving her to pay 40% for a lodge where six out of seven people were his relatives.

‘AITA for refusing to pay for my in laws to come on vacation with me?’
The relationship has long involved unequal financial contributions despite the income gap.





The vacation plan started as a couple’s trip but expanded to include his entire family.



This conflict exposes a pattern of financial imbalance and mismatched expectations in the relationship. The woman has consistently paid more than her proportional share for years, subsidizing his lifestyle and savings while receiving no joint security. The vacation request, initially romantic, became a family event where she was asked to fund a disproportionate amount — despite being the only non-relative.
Her partner’s insistence on 50/50 splits ignores income disparity and child-related costs, while his savings remain personal. This dynamic suggests one-sided benefit: she enables his goals (house near ex, family vacations) at her expense. The vacation bill (40% for one person among seven) feels exploitative, especially after her generosity.
Financial therapist Bari Tessler notes that “Unequal contributions without transparent agreement often breed resentment and power imbalances; fair partnerships require proportional splits or explicit compensation.” (The Art of Money, 2016) Here, lack of equity has eroded trust.
Practical steps include an immediate renegotiation: propose proportional bill splits (e.g., 35% her share) with any extra going to a joint house fund. Insist on legal protections (cohabitation agreement, joint deed percentage). If he refuses transparency or fairness, professional counseling or reevaluating the relationship protects her future. Generosity is beautiful; being taken for granted is not.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
The online community responded almost unanimously, calling the woman NTA and warning that her partner is financially exploiting her — using her income to subsidize his lifestyle, savings, and family while offering little security in return.
Nearly every commenter urged her to rethink the relationship, highlighting red flags like personal savings, no joint accounts, and the house plan favoring his ex/kids:










![[Reddit User] − NTA and am not sure what you see as the future in this relationship. He contributes less, wants to buy a house close to his ex, saves...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768277416953-11.webp)





A few asked questions or offered specific advice, but still supported her position:








This situation reveals a painful reality: generosity without reciprocity often turns into exploitation. Paying disproportionately for years while your partner builds personal wealth — then being asked to subsidize his family vacation — signals a lack of mutual respect and shared vision.
What would you do if your partner expected 50/50 splits despite a big income gap and his kids living there? Would you insist on proportional contributions and joint accounts, or see this as a sign to walk away?
