AITA for not paying my brother’s rent after he said I “owe him” for being his bigger sister?

A 28-year-old woman refused to pay her younger brother’s rent after he claimed she owed him for being his bigger sister. The demand came after he fell behind on payments and faced possible eviction, and instead of asking for a loan, he insisted she simply hand over thousands of dollars.

She had built her life from scratch, moving out at 18 and supporting herself without help. Meanwhile, her brother received financial backing from their parents for years. Now, with her own small apartment and tight budget, she is being pressured by both her brother and parents to “step up.” The conflict has left her feeling guilty, frustrated, and questioning whether standing her ground makes her the villain.

‘AITA for not paying my brother’s rent after he said I “owe him” for being his bigger sister?’

A childhood shaped by favoritism set the stage.

I (28F) have a younger brother (26M) who grew up with a very different financial experience than I did. He was the golden child whereas I was the “you’re so...

let him stay with them rent free for years, and still step in whenever life gets too hard for him. I moved out at 18, worked my ass off, and...

Her hard-earned independence became the breaking point.

Recently, I got my own small and humble apartment. It’s not much and pretty much empty at this point but it's mine and I love it.

Last week, my brother called me and demanded that I give him (not lend) a few thousand bucks because he was behind on rent and might get evicted.

I politely told him that I couldn’t as I was already on a tight budget, saving up for furniture, and trying to build an emergency fund.

He immediately lost it and told me I owe him because: We’re family I’m doing better than him He let me play with his toys when we were kids (which...

The pressure escalated when the family chose sides.

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I said that I can sympathize with him given the unfortunate situation, but I seriously cannot afford to give away any money considering my circumstances. I suggested that he ask...

He got mad and said they already do enough and now it was my turn. He even accused me of being selfish and greedy, even though he's the one who...

I must add that he takes his girlfriend out on fancy dates and buys her stuff I could never afford. Apparently rent just didn’t make the budget. The saddest part...

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They insisted that I chip in being the big and responsible sister, as it was the least I could do. I've been ignoring their calls and texts for days but...

This situation reflects a long-standing dynamic of favoritism and unequal expectations within families. The poster describes a childhood where responsibility was placed on her shoulders while her brother received continued financial support. That imbalance appears to have carried into adulthood, shaping how each sibling approaches money and accountability.

From one perspective, financial assistance between family members can be a compassionate gesture during emergencies. However, the key issue here lies in entitlement rather than hardship alone. The brother demanded money as a right, not as a request, and framed it as repayment for vague childhood “debts.” That framing suggests a misunderstanding of familial support versus obligation.

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There is also a broader social dimension. Parents who repeatedly intervene may unintentionally prevent their adult children from developing independence. Meanwhile, labeling one sibling as “the responsible one” often leads to emotional pressure and guilt. The poster’s guilt is understandable, yet financial stability built through years of sacrifice should not automatically become a shared resource. Healthy family support thrives on mutual respect, not coercion.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many users strongly supported her refusal and criticized the entitlement.

Ladyooh − NTA What an entitled s__t he is. Block him and your parents.

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flecktonesfan − NTA. He says it's "your turn"? For what, exactly? To support his freeloading ass? Ask him when it's going to be "his turn".

thecatsothermother − NTA. Your first mistake was telling him you have savings. You should have told him you don't have any.

Now your parents and him will hound you and hound you. Even if he did "let you play with his toys", bought you lavish gifts every birthday and Christmas,

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and was the best little brother any sister could ask for, you don't owe him a thing. Any chance you can go NC with the lot of them? Edit: typos

buttfury − NTA, you need a new family, yours sucks.

MuppetManiac − NTA. Your parents have enabled him until he cannot take care of himself.

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Either he’ll get the kick in the face to grow up and do better, or he won’t, and he’ll blame everyone else for his problems. Either way, it isn’t your...

Others questioned details or offered alternative takes.

sokali4nia − YTA for posting things that didnt happen

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BenH1223 − Nta if I were you I would cut them all off you don't owe him anything

WinterGirl91 − NTA I would go no or low contact with all of them.

A few commenters used humor to make their point.

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pourthebubbly − “Sorry, I can’t afford to buy your son’s girlfriend a new bag” Because really it’s your parents’ fault all of this is happening. Stand your ground and sing...

Hawaiianstylin808 − “I didn’t birth him. You did. He is your problem. you should have stopped at 1.” NTA.

This dispute highlights how childhood roles can linger long into adulthood, especially when one sibling is labeled responsible and the other protected. Financial independence built through sacrifice can quickly become a source of resentment when family members treat it as communal property.

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Should older siblings feel obligated to rescue younger ones financially? At what point does helping family cross the line into enabling? And how can someone maintain peace while protecting the stability they worked so hard to achieve?

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