AITA for taking my son’s scholarship money?

A single dad already committed to covering his son’s costly college tuition—around $16K per year after aid—suddenly faced mounting anxiety about supporting his younger children. When his graduating son unexpectedly won $10K in scholarships from community groups and foundations, the father assumed the money would reimburse him for the upfront payments he had already made. What makes the story more complicated is the complete mismatch in understanding.

The son viewed the awards as extra cash for his own college spending—books, living expenses, or fun—while the dad saw it as a direct offset to ease his burden. Tensions exploded when the father threatened to redirect the check to his own name through the distributing teacher. Now the son feels robbed of what he earned, and the dad insists it’s only fair given his sacrifices. The question remains: whose money is it really?

‘AITA for taking my son’s scholarship money?’

The financial pressure built as the dad prepared to send his son to an expensive university.

My son is going to an expensive school next year and I'm financially nervous about it. It's close to 16K a year after aid.

All of a sudden I'm worried about providing for my younger sons (I'm a single dad) now that I have this financial monkey on my back.

A few weeks before my son graduated, his class had an assembly where they gave out scholarship money.

The scholarships arrived unexpectedly during the senior year assembly.

The money was raised from foundations or groups like Rotary. My son won two awards totalling $10K. The problem was that we thought that we were on the same page...

I said it was going to be used for school and he agreed. What I meant was that it was going to be used to pay me back since I...

The disagreement surfaced when interpretations of “for school” clashed sharply.

Of course he's saying that it's "his" money and I'm saying it's not. It's for college and since I paid for it, it goes to pay me back. I would...

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I told him I'm not f__king around and all I have to do is tell the teacher who is in charge of distributing the money to send the check in...

Edit: He did not earn squat. The teacher in charge of the money said it was more of a popularity contest and gave bragging rights to the school and donors...

Many parents view scholarships as a direct relief to their own burden, especially when they’ve already committed significant resources upfront. In this case, the father sees the $10K as reimbursement that preserves funds for his other children—a practical stance given his single-parent status and long-term obligations. Threatening to redirect the check, however, shifts the dynamic from negotiation to control, which risks permanent damage to trust. Legally and ethically, merit-based awards are typically the student’s property, intended to support their education directly, not to repay parental contributions unless explicitly agreed beforehand.

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On the flip side, the son’s perspective carries weight too. Scholarships reward individual achievement (even if partly popularity-based), and many students rely on them for personal expenses like housing, meals, or books—costs parents often don’t fully cover. Expecting repayment without a prior clear agreement feels punitive, especially when the parent initially promised to handle tuition. The lack of transparency about finances created this mess: had the dad explained his tight budget and the impact on siblings earlier, the son might have understood the bigger picture.

Broader social context shows how college funding strains many families today. With rising costs and uneven aid, parents sometimes overcommit, then scramble to claw back resources. This story highlights the need for open, early conversations about money—setting expectations, creating written agreements if needed, and treating older teens as partners rather than dependents. Without that foundation, resentment builds on both sides, turning what could be shared relief into a painful power struggle.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Most users argue the awards belong to the son and criticize the dad for poor planning and entitlement.

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[Reddit User] − YTA -- You should have had a serious conversation with your son about this a long time ago. Also, you saved this up for him to pay...

Most parents save up a college fund for their kid for exactly that --- *to get them through college*. That's it. No expectations for *their kids* to pay them back.

Sorry you had more kids than you planned for, but. .. it's honestly kind of s__tty of you to expect your child to do that.

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Shouldn't you just be happy that your kid made it to college, got those scholarships, and just. ..support him, instead of dogging him about money?

Forsaken-Knowledge12 − YTA You also can’t take claim to his scholarship money. If he’s an adult the money will be legally made out in his name.

You can either restart a savings account and hope you’re able to help out your boys or they will have to rely on student aid and loans if they choose...

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He could take you to court and fight your for it. You’ll have a huge issue in your hands and most importantly you’re going to strain the relationship with your...

I can already tell you’re not going to put that money aside for your other children. You clearly have a troublesome personality. Did you already spend it?

[Reddit User] − YTA - you quite obviously did it in a way you could say what you wanted. As his dad you should be paying for his school,

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and that money is going towards more school that will help him potentiolly in the long run. I'm hoping that he does well, gets a great job, lots of money...

ZestyZebra2022 − YTA There are other expenses associated with college than paying tuition. And the donors of that scholarship raised the money for your son. ...not to "pay you back"

AdamWestsButtDouble − INFO: You keep saying you “paid for it. ” You didn’t pay for all four years. What are you planning to do going forward?

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These responses call out the lack of long-term strategy and suggest the dad created unrealistic expectations.

misdirected_asshole − YTA. You agreed to pay for his school BEFORE he got the scholarships. There was no agreent that if and when he got them it would go to...

OrciEMT − I don't understand: Do you intend to use the money to pay for your sons school fees (like the fundraiser intended) or do you intend to use it...

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firetothetrees − @op YTA/NTA Honestly this sounds like you approached it the wrong way with him and possibly set some bad expectations. LMK if this is correct.

You put aside $16k for him to go to school next year and this will be a big financial burden for you. Your son got $10k in grants so you...

Your son on the other hand is expecting you to pay the $16k and for him to have $10k in spending cash. Assuming this is correct you both need to...

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your financial situation and your expectations of him if you are going to pay $16k a year for heard to come. No doubt he will need some spending cash as...

But I'd encourage you to come up with an annual amount that you can afford, even if it's less then the $16k and encourage him to help make up the...

What is not great is telling someone u will spend the $16k then coming back and saying hey it would be great if I didn't have to.

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Yes he should recognize that giving the $10k to you is probably the best thing to do but without context explained in a factual manner it will be hard to...

Some ask for details on intent while others explain how both sides might have miscommunicated.

olagorie − YTA For the big mess that you made by being completely irresponsible with finances. This it not how you responsibly plan all of your children’s education. It seems...

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You cannot just throw money at an expensive school for one year while you don’t have a plan how to pay for second year. And have no money left for...

If you can’t afford an expensive school, then your child can’t go to an expensive school. You have set him up for high expectations that you’re not going to be...

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Now all you can do is try to salvage and make the best of it. Sit your son down and explain your finances to him. Tell him that the 10...

And he will only get them if he doesn’t party in his first year but study hard as there won’t be a second year if he doesn’t win more stipends....

Ok_Solution_5744 − Info. If i understand this correctly, since you paid the tuition in full then you are assuming the 10k is some sort of refund back to you right?

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This story captures the intense pressure many single parents face when juggling college costs for multiple kids, especially when unexpected windfalls arrive with conflicting expectations. While the father’s stress is real, the near-universal community pushback underscores that scholarships are generally the student’s to use for their education—not automatic parental reimbursement.

What do you think—should parents who pay upfront tuition have first claim on any scholarships their child wins, or do those funds belong entirely to the student for their own college needs? Have you ever had a major money disagreement with a family member over education costs? How was it resolved, or what would you advise in this situation? Drop your thoughts below.

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