AITAH for telling my wife to leave?

One man just made the toughest call of his marriage: he told his wife to pack her bags and leave. It all started when she lost her job after picking up a coworker’s debit card from the floor, thinking it was hers because it had the same generic design. She used it to buy juice boxes for their kids. Two hours later, police arrested her at work.

From there, things spiraled. She secretly developed a gambling addiction on apps, drained his savings, stole from his mom and her dad, and kept going even after he tried to help. Now, after yet another betrayal, trust is completely shattered. He’s torn about the kids and feels guilty, but he can’t keep living like this. Thousands of people online are weighing in.

‘AITAH for telling my wife to leave?’

It all began back in January when his wife lost her job over a seemingly innocent mistake:

Starting back in January, my wife lost her job due to picking up a card off the ground \* of her workplace, which she thought was hers due to the...

She used it the following day on some juice boxes for the kids on their way to day care. Fast forward 2 hours, police showed up at her job and...

By April and May, she had secretly developed an addiction to gambling games and apps. He only discovered it in mid-July:

FFW to April/May, she started an addiction to gambling games/apps which she hid from me and I did not find out about until mid July.

In the interim of this time, I caught her at the end of June using up 1.4k over the 2-3 month period. I didn't see any of it at face...

I then found out that this was from her using my card for these apps (this is my personal savings account, not the joint for bills). I figure this is...

In mid-July, after he confronted her and expressed disappointment, things got even worse:

Mid july comes around, I find out after putting my foot down about being dissapointed of her actions, she stole my mom's card from her wallet along with her dad's...

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I had to convince my mom to avoid getting cops involved (prolly a bad action on my part, 100%).I told her I'd help her get help as I saw this...

However as time went on, she had a distaste for wanting to get help as much as I wanted to help her get it in the long run, however you...

By August, he thought he had everything under control with a new card and reset accounts:

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August rolls around, I have a new card, paypal is reset etc thinking everything is good as gravy. FFW again to the end of the month, find out she's been...

I didn't hide well enough, however my bank noticed this action and froze everything as of last night and had me review it all again this morning, which was a...

After confronting her again about the broken trust and the long-term harm to their kids, he made the painful decision:

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Due to this, I had confronted her about our previous discussion and how it impacts my trust with her, along with harming our kids in the long run.. ​

I asked her to pack her bag and have her sister come pick her up to bring her to her parents for the time being as I cannot trust her...

I know there's perhaps questions y'all may have to fill in some questionable blanks, which I'm happy to answer in the comments for you.

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I just tried to give a TL;DR as best with the key points why I asked her to leave. I don't plan on this being a "I'm divorcing you" situation,...

AITAH for this action? Because I keep feeling I am for what I'm doing to her and how the kids will feel, but I can't keep having trust like that...

At the heart of this story is a severe gambling addiction that has spiraled into repeated lying, theft, and the complete destruction of marital trust. The husband tried forgiveness and offered to get her professional help, but she showed no real desire to change — a heartbreakingly common pattern in gambling addiction cases.

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Some might argue that kicking her out is too harsh, especially when she’s clearly struggling with a serious illness. They may say addiction requires endless patience and support rather than tough consequences. But once the behavior crosses into stealing from family members and directly endangering the children’s financial future, protecting the household becomes the priority.

According to the Mayo Clinic, people with gambling disorder frequently “turn to theft or fraud to get gambling money,” and this can lead to family bankruptcy, home loss, and even jail time if left unchecked. Financial expert Axton Betz-Hamilton from GamFin emphasizes: “When addiction is involved, protection is not punishment.” Securing finances — changing passwords, freezing accounts, placing credit locks — is the first and most critical step before any therapy can even begin.

Practical advice: Immediately protect the children by placing a credit freeze on their names to prevent identity theft or fraudulent accounts. Consult a lawyer about separating finances and consider legal separation if the situation doesn’t improve. Encourage her to join Gamblers Anonymous or seek specialized gambling addiction counseling. The husband should also get support for himself through groups like Gam-Anon, as living with an addict can cause deep emotional trauma. Sometimes, clear and painful consequences are the only wake-up call that finally motivates change — as long as real help is available when she’s ready.

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Here’s what people had to say to OP:

People online had very strong opinions — most sided with the husband and urged him to take even stronger protective steps.

Many strongly supported his decision, calling it necessary to safeguard himself and the kids:

CommonEarly4706 − I have a few questions? If she stole your mom and Dad’s card how do believe she just found her coworker’s card on the ground used it for...

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What does she thought it was hers do to same skin mean? I don’t think you are the a__hole here but your wife definitely needs major help

Straysmom − NTA. But you should have let your parents file charges against her. Though it's harsh, that might have been the only way to stop her & possibly get...

You really need to warn them because she will do it again. I don't see things improving unless she gets help. And she won't get help unless she is forced...

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idreaminwords − There is no way she 'accidentally' picked that card up

eccatameccata − I know a woman who opened credit cards in her children’s name and ran up tens of thousands of dollars. They found out when the first daughter turned...

Agoraphobe961 − NTA. She’s in a very n__ty spiral and the kick to the b__t might be the wake up call she needs. At this point, your priority needs to...

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She’s already stolen from you, her parents, and your parents (and yes it was theft), what’s to say she won’t do the same to your kids? You should look into...

DevilGuy − "I thought it was mine" Proceeds to steal another credit card to gamble with. .. Steals two more. .. yeah NTA. Although if you actually believe the first...

Speedy89t − Reading this, she definitely either stole her coworker’s card or at least knew it wasn’t hers.

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facinationstreet − I don't plan on this being a "I'm divorcing you" situation It should be. She is a liar and a thief. She didn't 'find' the co-workers debit card...

She then proceeded to steal from your mother, her father and you multiple times, having learned no lesson after being arrested. She was fired for stealing. She wasn't fired because...

They don't trust her but you're over here teaching her a 'lesson' by sending her to live with her parents in timeout for a couple of days. Change all of...

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All banking should be electronic with communication going to an email that she does not have access to. Change your passwords for all of your accounts - including social media,...

Once you've done that (today), you need to lock down your credit ASAP. You do this by contacting the 3 major credit agencies and putting your credit on lock.

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No one can open any kind of account (credit card, electric) in your name without you being notified and approving it. Then get a lawyer. It does not get better...

A few were more critical, accusing him of enabling her addiction by not going far enough:

Readsumthing − YTA for how you’re handling this. Been here, done this. Once you get your money and cards locked down, she’ll move on to pawnable/fast cash stuff. Electronics, games,...

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maybe you’ve already had stuff “go missing or stolen” Wake up bro. And that first card at work? Honey, come on. The coffee pot is on fire. There’s a Grand...

How much deeper in the financial pit are you willing to fall? If you don’t divorce her, or at the very least, file for a legal separation, her debts are...

Bankruptcy? Lose your home? Years of debt? Jail, attorney fees? You are in serious denial, and you are part of her problem. You enable her behavior to continue. You should...

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Do you want to know when an addict seeks help? When the consequences become so great, that continuing is no longer an option. You, my friend, seem to be the...

Others offered sympathy mixed with tough love and practical warnings:

Key_Slide_7302 − I feel for ya. I can’t recall all but maybe 1 time an addicted gambler actually went into remission. I can count dozens of times an addicted gambler...

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I hope she wakes up, but if she doesn’t want the help then it’s time for you to start protecting yourself and your family from her. Good luck.

the_dark_viper − NTA. Maybe the marriage can be saved with help, However you do need to completely get unattached from her money and credit wise.

Also check and monitor your credit and your kids credit. Call your bank and credit card company and ask if you can have a security password/phrase added to your accounts.

SnooWords4839 − NTA - Freeze all your accounts, talk to a lawyer. She is stealing from many, let her face the charges!

ArmChairDetective84 − NTA You’re mom is nicer than me because I would have filed charges and SO SHOULD YOU

jacksonlove3 − NTA. She needs to want to change and to help herself. You clearly can’t trust her anymore at the moment and that is on her. Her actions have...

the_waco_kid2020 − You honestly believe the whole "I accidentally found and used my co-worker's card" excuse after knowing the rest of her story? Denial ain't just a river in Egypt.

This heartbreaking story shows just how fast gambling addiction can spiral into lies, theft, and the collapse of family trust. The husband chose to set firm boundaries to protect his children, even though it left him feeling guilty. While most people online back his decision, many insist he needs to take even stronger legal and financial steps right away.

What do you think? Is giving her space and a wake-up call the right move to help someone with addiction, or should he go straight to divorce and full separation? Drop your thoughts in the comments below!

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