AITA for not paying my nephews’ tuition?

A 39-year-old woman recently finalized a divorce after a one-night stand with a colleague turned into a messy scandal when he sent proof to her husband. The split was relatively civil — she kept the family home (set up to transfer to their 17-year-old son David eventually), and they share custody.

But now a new conflict has erupted. Her father’s terminal cancer diagnosis prompted a planned family cruise — overlapping with her ex-husband’s custody time. While he’s open to discussing it, he has already refused to continue paying private school tuition for her sister’s two sons (16M and 13M), who had been benefiting from his generosity during the marriage. Her family insists she sell the house to cover the fees, arguing the divorce was her fault. She feels guilty but doesn’t want to lose her home. Is she the asshole for refusing?

‘AITA for not paying my nephews’ tuition?’

It all began with a marriage that ended because of my own mistake:

I (39F) recently got divorced. It was my fault, I had a one night stand with a colleague, he fell in love, and when I didn't want to follow him,...

All things considered, the divorce proceedings were relatively amicable. I really wanted to stay in our home, it's where I raised our son (David, 17M), and we found a way...

Then came the heartbreaking news that changed priorities:

Soon after the divorce, my father (76M) was diagnosed with cancer. He always wanted to go on a cruise with the whole family, and is planning the big voyage for...

But that time was meant to be time for John to see David, so I need John's OK. I brought it up with him, and he understood that my father's...

At the same time, the school tuition bill arrived at a very sensitive moment:

Meanwhile, school tuition comes due, we send David to an expensive private school. John has an impressive income, and he's happy to pay for David’s education..

But, prior to our divorce, we were helping my sister (Susan, 43F), who is not as wealthy, by paying to send her two children (16M and 13M) to the same...

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Susan gets the bill and sends it to John. He responded that since they are not family any more, it isn't his problem..

My sister and her family reacted with strong feelings of unfairness:

Susan thinks it isn't fair on her children to have to switch schools since they have both already been going there, have friends there, and would have to go to...

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Pressure from my parents quickly escalated with a drastic suggestion:

My parents think that because the divorce was my fault, this is my responsibility. They suggest I sell the house and come live with them. They have even found someone...

but also it's not as straightforward as they make it sound. In the divorce we set up the deed to transfer the property to David after I die. John wanted...

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My ex-husband has stayed firm on his position:

John thinks it's nothing to do with him anymore, and if there is money for a cruise then it's time for the rest of the family to step up and...

In any case though, I don't really want to push back on him because he hasn't technically agreed to let David go on the holiday and I don't want to...

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And finally, the inner conflict that keeps me up at night:

I feel guilty about the situation; I don’t see a happy way of getting the money together. But I also agree that it is unfair that my nephews’ will likely...

I wish I could help, but I'm not the wealthy aunty I was a year ago, I'm by no means living in poverty, but I don't have that kind of...

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This is not about whether the nephews “deserve” to stay in private school — it’s about legal, moral, and practical boundaries after a divorce. The ex-husband (John) was never legally obligated to pay for his ex-sister-in-law’s children. That generosity existed only while the marriage did. Once the marriage ended, so did any informal financial support arrangement.

The family’s demand that the OP sell the house (which is legally structured to protect her son’s inheritance) is unreasonable and emotionally manipulative. The house is not just an asset — it’s a home and future security for David. Suggesting she give it up to subsidize her sister’s lifestyle choices ignores her own financial reality and her son’s long-term interests.

Psychologist Dr. John Gottman (renowned for divorce and family dynamics research) has noted that post-divorce, extended family often tries to preserve pre-divorce benefits at the expense of the newly single parties — especially when guilt (here from the affair) can be weaponized. The aunt and parents are projecting responsibility onto the OP instead of addressing their own financial planning or seeking scholarships, loans, or public-school options.

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The OP is not the asshole for refusing to pay or sell the house. She acknowledges her role in the divorce and feels appropriate guilt — but that guilt does not extend to indefinitely bankrolling her sister’s children. The ex-husband is also within his rights to stop paying. The real question is whether the family will respect new boundaries or continue to punish the OP for past mistakes.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

The Reddit community overwhelmingly sided with the OP — NTA — and were shocked by the family’s entitlement.

Most readers called the family’s demands outrageous and unfair:

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Dairinn − Lol, there's a cousin who can afford the house, the entire family is going on a cruise but the man who was cheated on and isn't actually family...

Tell sis dear to get a second job, and if the rest of the family is this concerned, then everyone can chip in, including you since you feel bad about...

jrm1102 − NTA - for the question you asked. We’re not here to judge your cheating. But you know who is an AH - your family. John is no longer...

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and I cant blame him. The rest of your family should step up and help out here if they still want these two kids to go to that school.

vt2022cam − NTA — the sense of entitlement from your sister and your whole family to your money and your ex husband’s money is a little amazing.

This home is your retirement and your son’s future too. It’s unfortunate and yes, your actions caused it but it was an overly generous gift for while it lasted.

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BayTerp − Your entire family is delusional. How do people have that line of reasoning?

MissSuzieSunshine − Oh nooo NTA! First of all, your Sister should be appreciative of the time you and John did pay for her children to go to that more expensive...

But for your assistance, they would have never had the opportunity. I can understand the difficulty of having to change schools, however, its not the end of the world.

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sinusrinse − Your parents are assholes. They want you to sell your house to pay for your nephews’ school? That’s nuts. It’s unfair that your sister sent them to a...

Many defended the ex-husband’s stance:

YouthNasia63 − Your financial status has changed, you can’t afford to pay for your nephews school anymore. And that sucks for them. But, nooo, you don’t have to sell your...

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so you can pay for the kids school. WTF. And your ex husband is right, your nephews tuition bills aren’t his problem any more, as he is no longer part...

Chocolatecandybar_ − NTA, but you're being a TA to yourself because you have the solution at hand. Ex husband already refused to help your sister, and ex husband already set...

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A few highlighted the bigger picture:

Prestigious-Apple425 − NTA. … The ownership of the house has been settled legally and is none of your parents' affair. YOU need to learn to be a bit stronger in...

Odd-End-1405 − NTA for this. (for the affair. ....well) Your sister is delusional to expect to continue to mooch off your (ex) husband's favorable financial position. SHE is the parent,...

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You’re not the asshole for refusing to pay your nephews’ tuition or sell your house. The divorce changed the financial reality — and your ex-husband was never legally required to subsidize your sister’s children. Your family’s insistence that you sacrifice your son’s future home and stability to “fix” the situation is deeply unfair.

Your guilt is understandable — the affair was your mistake — but it doesn’t create an open-ended obligation to fund your sister’s lifestyle choices. The nephews’ education is ultimately their parents’ responsibility, not yours or your ex’s. If the cruise is truly important for your father, focus on securing your ex’s agreement without leveraging the tuition issue. You can feel compassion for your nephews without destroying your own security. What do you think — should she stand firm, or is there a compromise that could keep the peace without costing her everything?

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