AITA because I won’t pay for my son’s car in its entirety like I did for his older siblings?
A dad with five kids has always bought each a used car around $10,000 when they turned 16 and got their license – a family tradition he stuck to for the first three children. But when his fourth son, Jack, hit the milestone, the grandparents handed him a $5,000 check – five to ten times more than the small cash gifts they gave the older kids.
The dad decided Jack should cover half the car with that money to “even things out,” triggering anger from his son, his parents, and a revelation about why Jack is the clear favorite: he looks the most “white” in a mixed-race family. Did the dad go too far by shifting the burden to his son?

‘AITA because I won’t pay for my son’s car in its entirety like I did for his older siblings?’
The tradition was consistent for the older children:



The grandparents’ gifts had always been modest – until Jack:


When it came time to shop for the car:



The grandparents jumped in and escalated:




Favoritism from grandparents can fracture families, especially when it’s this blatant and tied to racial bias. In a mixed-race household, preferring the child who looks the most “white-passing” inflicts real harm—not just on the other kids who feel less valued, but also on the favored child who learns love is conditional on appearance. This kind of dynamic normalizes discrimination and leaves lasting emotional scars, often leading to resentment between siblings and identity struggles for everyone involved.
The dad’s initial reaction—reducing his own contribution to Jack’s car—was born from years of built-up frustration with his parents’ behavior. While it’s understandable to want to correct an imbalance, shifting the cost onto the teenager ends up punishing him for something he didn’t control. Parenting experts consistently warn against making children pay the price for adult conflicts; it teaches that fairness is situational rather than consistent, and it drags the child into the middle of generational tension.
The grandparents’ excuse of “liquid cash” doesn’t justify the massive disparity, and their defensive response—calling the dad cruel for trying to keep things even—highlights how entitlement can blind people to the damage they’re causing. When favoritism crosses into racial territory, it’s no longer just about money; it’s about values, and allowing ongoing exposure to that bias risks teaching the kids that discrimination is acceptable within the family.
The update is where real growth shows. By voiding the check, giving a small personal gift, and covering the full car cost, the dad reaffirmed that his love and support aren’t affected by outside interference. This approach protects Jack from being scapegoated while still confronting the grandparents’ actions indirectly. Long-term, limiting contact with toxic influences, having honest age-appropriate conversations about racism and favoritism, and modeling unconditional parental equality are far more effective than trying to financially “balance” someone else’s unfairness.
Check out how the community responded:
The community landed heavily on YTA for the dad in his conflict with Jack, though many agreed the grandparents were the bigger villains:
Most emphasized that the son shouldn’t be punished for something outside his control – two wrongs don’t make a right:



Many called out the racism angle and urged cutting off the grandparents:



Some saw ESH or defended the intent to balance:


This story exposes how favoritism – especially when laced with racial bias – can poison family milestones and force parents into impossible positions. The dad initially tried to fix one unfairness by creating another, but his update reflects real growth in choosing consistent parental love over score-settling.
What do you think about the final choice to void the check and pay full price for the car? Should parents ever adjust their gifts to counter grandparent favoritism, or is equal treatment from mom and dad non-negotiable? Have you navigated similar family bias or favoritism? Share your thoughts below.
