AITA for not wanting to gift my husband’s mother money?

A wife is furious after her husband suggested using $150,000 from her premarital savings to buy his mother a house—and commit to paying half the mortgage since his mom can’t afford it alone. She already agreed to let her mother-in-law live with them indefinitely, even though it wasn’t part of her marriage expectations. The money is her premarital inheritance, saved for their own house deposit, which feels increasingly out of reach with rising prices.

Her husband insists it’s just a “discussion,” but she’s incredulous and angry that he even raised it. Now she’s questioning: Is she wrong for refusing? For being so upset? For calling it “my money” after less than five years of marriage? The community is overwhelmingly on her side, with many urging her to protect her assets and reconsider the relationship.

‘AITA for not wanting to gift my husband’s mother money?’

The mother-in-law already lives with the couple:

My husband’s mother lives with us for various reasons. I’ve already agreed for her to live with us indefinitely even though this is clearly not something I was expecting when...

The husband proposed using her premarital savings:

He now wants to provide his mother $150000 to buy a house and to commit our funds to pay half the mortgage for her. She cannot afford a full mortgage...

For context, the money is “mine”. I brought it into the relationship and we are saving it for a house deposit which is already further and further out of reach...

She was shocked and angry:

I am incredulous and very angry that this has even been raised.. 1) AITA for not wanting to do this. 2) AITA for being this angry about it even being...

This situation reveals a major red flag in the marriage: a husband attempting to redirect significant premarital assets to benefit his family, disregarding his wife’s goals and financial security. The money is clearly premarital (inheritance/savings brought into the relationship), and using it for his mother’s house would deplete the couple’s own home deposit—potentially leaving them renting forever while his mom owns property. This isn’t just about generosity; it’s about priorities and fairness.

Allowing the mother-in-law to live rent-free is already a huge compromise. Suggesting she use her savings for a separate house for MIL—while paying half the mortgage—creates an unequal burden: the wife funds her MIL’s homeownership while delaying her own. If they divorce, the husband could benefit from the asset; if MIL passes, he inherits. This imbalance can breed resentment and erode trust.

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Financial therapist Bari Tessler advises: “Premarital assets should remain separate unless both partners fully agree on commingling. When one spouse pushes to redirect significant funds to their family, it often signals deeper issues around loyalty, entitlement, and financial boundaries. The non-consenting partner must protect their security—especially when the request feels one-sided.”

Practical advice: Immediately move the money to a separate account in her name only. Consult a lawyer about protecting premarital assets in your jurisdiction (many places exclude inheritance if not commingled). Have a calm but firm conversation: “This money is for our future home—I’m not open to using it for your mother’s house.” If he pushes or dismisses her anger, couples counseling is essential to address underlying dynamics. If he refuses to respect her boundaries, divorce may be worth considering before more assets are at risk. She’s not wrong for being angry; she’s protecting her future.

See what others had to share with OP:

The online community was overwhelmingly supportive of the wife, declaring her NTA across the board. Commenters urged her to protect her money immediately, consider divorce, and criticized the husband’s entitlement.

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Most emphasized the unfairness and red flags in the husband’s suggestion:

coffeemom23 − Yikes, absolutely NTA. And frankly, OP, I'm generally pretty in favor of mixed/shared finances in marriage, but your husband even suggesting this makes me think you should lock...

Trick_Delivery4609 − NTA Don't do it! !!! Move your money ASAP so your husband can't use it. I'd honestly divorce him for pushing this.

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Pretty_Little_Mind − NTA. This is a premarital asset, yes? Make sure your husband has no access to it. And freeze your credit. Asking that takes some balls. And honestly, he’s...

The fact that you’ve already compromised with his mom moving is very kind of you. He’s needs to get his head on straight or you need to consider all your...

Clean-Fisherman-4601 − NTA. Hoping you signed a prenup since it's your money. Your husband sounds insane to want to buy his mother a house and pay the mortgage.

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Fantastic_Fix_4701 − First of all, NTA Second of all, WTF? Third of all, RUN! Am I right in guessing you don't even have a house yourself?

Why gift MIL a house? Just don't! Buy your own house, and mam-boy can pay rent for his mother to live somewhere else - out of his own funds. And...

Many suggested ways to protect her money and highlighted the risks:

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VolumeNumerous3173 − So here is what this all means: Wife currently foots half the bill for mother-in-law by letting her live in the marital home rent-free.

That is already generous but the new plan steps it up quite a bit: If they divorce or his mother dies while they are married the husband inherits the house...

Very well, in that case it should be no problem if the wife uses her money to buy a house in her name only and rents it out to her...

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celticmusebooks − Not sure where you live but check with a lawyer... MOST states in the US exclude "gifted" or "inherited" money from marital assets as long as it's not...

Is he an only child? Was the subject of supporting his mom discussed before you married? Is this a cultural thing where a son is expected to support his mother?

Commenters suggested other solutions and called out the husband’s priorities:

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stringtownie − NTA Sounds like if you do that you will never get your own house. As a married couple, your (as a couple) finances and goals come first.

You are helping MIL out by providing her a place to live which is already a lot! But it doesn't make sense, financially, or for your marriage, to buy her...

mousepallace − So, you haven’t bought a house for yourselves yet but he wants you to spend your savings on a house for his mother? 😯

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SorbetNo7877 − NTA but here is a new plan: you use the money to buy a house and husband and mother can stay put.

No-Translator-1134 − Let them live together with their money 😂

ConfusedAt63 − So, your husband wants you to set yourself on fire to keep his mother warm?

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This story highlights a major tension in marriage: when one partner’s family expectations clash with shared financial goals. The wife has already made a huge compromise by letting her MIL live rent-free—asking her to fund a separate house for MIL is unreasonable and unfair.

What do you think? Should premarital money always be shared in marriage, or is it okay to keep it separate? Have you dealt with in-law financial pressure? Share your thoughts in the comments—we’d love to hear your experiences!

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