AITA for financially contributing more to one child’s life?

Giving one child a house and lavish wedding while the other explores life freely sounds generous—until the second asks for a down payment and finances have changed. Two mothers grapple with fairness across decades.

The original poster and her wife helped Ava settle nearby with hundreds of thousands. Heather declined local land, preferring independence. Now she seeks modest home-buying aid; one mom resists selling the unused plot. Fears of favoritism clash with retirement realities, threatening equal love signals.

‘AITA for financially contributing more to one child’s life?’

Family background established equal love.

We have two kids, Ava (35f) and Heather (33f). We have a great relationship with both kids. About 12 years ago, Ava got engaged to her now husband. We bought...

Heather’s independence shaped different support.

Heather has lived in a few different cities, taken different college programs, etc. She seems content to keep exploring where her happy is, and I think that's great.

About 10 years ago, different plots of land came for sale in our neighborhood, We asked Heather which she wanted. She thanked us for the thought,

but said that she didn't know where she wanted to be and that we shouldn't buy land for her. We ended up buying a plot of land near us. We...

Current request sparked marital disagreement.

Fast forward to now, Heather approaches us, clearly nervous, and respectfully asked if we would be able to help her with a down payment for a house in the city...

This has caused an argument between myself (56f) and my wife (60f). I would love to help Heather, but honestly we are in very different financial circumstances now then we...

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My wife thinks that Heather does not ask for much and that we have clearly helped one child significantly more than the other. (Ava's wedding cost tens of thousands of...

She thinks we should sacrifice whatever we can to help Heather. To be clear, we have financially helped Heather over the years, helped with decorations when she's moved, with furniture,...

(I know it's not the same, but I want to be clear we are involved in both kids lives). I also know that Heather would be uncomfortable if she knew...

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I think if we talk to Heather openly about the difference in our financial circumstances now and then, she would understand. My wife wants to sell the piece of land...

I really don't want to do that. For a few reasons. Including that I think Heather would regret that in the future because she has mentioned once or twice over...

Prices for land here have gone up significantly. To be frank, nobody in our family could ever afford to buy here now or in future.. AITA for not being able...

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Edits clarified intent and constraints.

I have been told I can edit. To provide more clarity Mel and I are both women, that seemed to cause some confusion in the comments. I just want to...

We didn't plan, and the fact that there are so many of you saying that Heather will think we value her less is our biggest fear here. Heather is a...

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I am not comfortable getting too specific but over the years there have been some unexpected health issues arise, with my parents and then Ava's kids that have depleted our...

But bottom line, that's something we should have taken into account when giving Ava so much. There have been many suggestions here that have been helpful so I thank you...

Heather is a person who is incredibly sensitive and kind. Most often to her own detriment. To a point where I think she knows we would prefer her to live...

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To be clear I am absolutely open to the sale of the land or transferring it to Heather now, it's just how to best approach it so that Heather doesn't...

You've given us a lot to think about and we're going to try to move forward as best we can to make sure Heather knows she is loved and valued...

I'm not sure what else to say other than thank you for taking the time to comment. We are going to do our best to improve going forward.

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Unequal gifting created perceived favoritism: Ava received a house and wedding (~$400k+); Heather got furniture and declined land. Current constraints—health costs, retirement—limit cash, yet the unsold plot represents Heather’s earmarked share. Resistance to liquidating it stems from parental hopes, not her stated needs.

The younger mom prioritizes autonomy; the elder sees imbalance. Heather’s kindness risks self-denial if guilt enters. Transparency prevents resentment. Estate planner Suze Orman advises “Equal isn’t always fair, but explainable differences preserve relationships” (The Money Class, 2011). Here, timeline and health drains justify variance, yet optics demand remedy.

Transfer the deed to Heather immediately. Let her decide: hold, build, or sell. Update wills to equalize residual assets. Host a family meeting framing the land as her asset, not leverage.

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Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Reddit delivered a unanimous YTA verdict, accusing the parents of punishing Heather’s independence while clinging to control via the unwanted land. Advice centered on immediate transfer and honest communication.

Users blasted the imbalance and land hoarding.

NJtoOx − I think YTA for paying tens of thousands for Ava’s wedding and hundreds of thousands for Ava’s house but not putting aside or saving anything close to that...

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If you can’t afford it now then you can’t afford it, but if at one point you were able to afford giving a gift of hundreds of thousands of dollars...

Est666 − YTA. You ignored Heather telling you that she didn’t want the plot of land and bought it anyway. Now your wife is telling you to sell it to...

That doesn’t make any sense. I get that your financial situation has changed but you have the power to do one thing your child has asked for and you’re saying...

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The issue isn’t just your finances, it’s your stubborn refusal to see that the plot of land was you, you, you. You’ve lavished your other daughter, you owe Heather this...

Purplefox71 − YTA You are basically punishing Heather for not wanting to settle down at the same time and same location as her sister.

If she had wanted to purchase 12 years ago, the same time as her sister you would have divided the funds allocated to help your children between your two daughters...

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As you stated in your post you gave Ava hundreds of thousands while withholding no money for her sister.

While you are not obligated to help your children equally, helping one to the tune of hundreds of thousands and the other to zero must sting for Heather. You clearly...

Many urged transferring the land outright.

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Testingthrowaway00 − INFO Why not give her the land? She could make her own decision than? That would make it equal. Further your circumstances may be different.

However you can't give one child 100 thousands of dollars and the other 10 thousand and believe you are doing the right thing.

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This will cause a rift in your family and that will be your doing and nobody else's. Your response does not inspire confidence in your motives and actions. So I'm...

[Reddit User] − INFO: you bought the plot of land for Heather right? I don’t understand why you don’t give it to her now. That way she can do what...

Andante79 − I was with you until you said that not only do you still have that land, but that you just don't want to sell it. You tried to...

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and you're basically punishing her for following her own dreams which didn't match up with yours. And paying for "decorations and furniture" are negligible compared to a house and a...

Others highlighted long-term resentment risks.

[Reddit User] − YTA I think it's strange that you spent so much on one daughter withou putting some aside for the other. and you ignored her by buying a...

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I get that situations do change and you can't give money you don't have but you've clearly favoured one daughter.

[Reddit User] − Huge YTA. You paid for one daughter's wedding and bought her a freaking house. Now you won't even help your other daughter with a down payment? Why...

SoloPiName − The old "financially punish a kid for being the one that never needed financial assistance until now. " Yta

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FloofyKnitter − YTA. You spent plenty on one child, and instead of setting aside an equal amount for the other, you bought property she definitively said she did not want....

but now you are refusing to sell the property she didn't want to help her buy one she does, "just in case. " She made her wishes clear and you...

sabreyna − YTA After spending hundred of thousends on one child you should have started saving the same amount for the other child. You payed for a wedding AND a...

Even if you don't have the money now, it will be a slap in the face for Heather. Edit: I'm glad to see your update/edit OP. Good luck with everything:)

syboor − YTA. Tell Heather you are willing to sell the land for her and let her decide for herself. You are not an a__hole for "overcommitting" to Ava at...

There's a timeline involved and it makes perfect sense for wannabe-grandparents to help a child that is about to settle down and procreate. If you were unable to help Heather,...

But you are perfectly able to help Heather. You are just unwilling, because you have decided that you know better than her what she should be doing with her life.

squirlysquirel − YTA in your words. ..that block of land is earmarked for Heather. Talk to her, let her decide if she keeps or sells. Don't disadvantage her now for...

[Reddit User] − YTA. My parents did this to me in favor of my sister too, and I will never forget or forgive it! So enjoy that and I hope...

Fun-Dimension5196 − It sounds like Heather wanted to be free and your gift came with the condition that she stayed in her hometown. Now you're hanging on to it, still...

Equal love doesn’t require identical gifts, but unexplained disparities breed resentment. The unused land symbolizes control, not care—Heather declined it twice. Deed transfer empowers her choice without guilt. Wills can balance residuals. Open dialogue framing the plot as hers prevents lifelong sting.

Would you transfer the land today, or wait for her to ask again? When does parental vision override adult autonomy?

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