AITA for refusing to help my bf’s daughter after she blew all her money?
A woman is standing firm after her boyfriend asked her to cover his 18-year-old daughter’s rent for the next month. The daughter blew through an $8,000 lump sum meant to last until May, falling for a modeling agency scam that took $4,000 for photos and then vanished. Now the boyfriend, short on cash himself, expects his girlfriend to step in financially, arguing that dating him comes with some level of responsibility toward his child.
What makes the situation more complicated is that the girlfriend had warned him against handing over the full amount at once. She suggested monthly allowances or direct rent payments instead, but he dismissed her input, insisting the daughter was responsible and reminding her the girl wasn’t her child. Now that the predictable outcome has arrived, he’s flipped the script and wants her to help bail them out.

‘AITA for refusing to help my bf’s daughter after she blew all her money?’
The trouble began when the boyfriend decided to hand his freshman daughter a large lump sum despite clear warnings.




Things quickly unraveled after the daughter fell for a costly scam that drained most of the money.



The boyfriend then turned to his girlfriend for help, claiming she should contribute because they’re together.



At its core, the issue is financial responsibility and respect for prior advice. The girlfriend offered practical suggestions to avoid exactly this outcome, but her input was rejected on the grounds that the daughter wasn’t her child. When the consequences arrived, the boyfriend attempted to shift partial responsibility onto her simply because of their dating status. This creates an unfair expectation: excluding someone from decision-making while later expecting them to fund the cleanup.
Most relationship experts would agree that dating a parent does not automatically make you financially liable for their grown children, especially when the child is legally an adult and the original plan ignored sensible precautions. Opposing views often come from the parent’s side, where emotional pressure and guilt can make the request feel urgent and justified.
The boyfriend may genuinely believe that helping his daughter is a shared partnership obligation, or that his promise to repay removes any burden. However, this overlooks the principle that advice ignored should not translate into financial obligation for the person who gave it. The broader social perspective here is clear: young adults must learn from financial mistakes, and parents bear primary responsibility for supporting (or not supporting) those lessons. Expecting a non-parent partner to subsidize poor choices sets a dangerous precedent for future money conflicts in the relationship.
These are the responses from Reddit users:
Most users strongly supported the woman’s decision, emphasizing that she bears no financial responsibility and had given sound advice from the start.











Some opinions offered a more balanced view, still supporting the woman while pointing out deeper issues in the relationship.



![[Reddit User] − NTA Sounds like the little spend thrift needs to get a job or drop out. "A fool and his money are soon parted" Not sure if the...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768979758451-4.webp)
A few light-hearted, humorous comments helped ease the tension while clearly taking her side.
![[Reddit User] − NTA. Thank goodness he raised all his red flags as a BF before you got married and tied your finances together. It gives you time to get...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768979767928-1.webp)
![[Reddit User] − NTA. ... the fact that he feels that it is ok to ask you to pay for his daughters' is sending up 🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩 He didn't like you...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768979769476-2.webp)
The woman is holding her ground on a straightforward principle: she is not financially responsible for her boyfriend’s adult daughter, especially after her earlier warning was ignored. This case illustrates how money boundaries can become a major flashpoint in relationships involving a partner’s grown children, and how expecting financial help from a dating partner is not always reasonable.
What do you think about this situation? Would you help a partner’s child in a similar scenario even if you had warned them ahead of time? Or do you believe financial boundaries should be set clearly from the beginning when dating someone with kids? Share your thoughts in the comments below.
