AITA for helping pay off one of my daughter’s student loans and not the others?
A father proudly helped his eldest daughter clear the final $500 of her student loans—plus extra to treat herself—after she aggressively paid down $60,000 in debt through extreme frugality over three years. His youngest daughter, with the same starting debt and similar salary, still owes most of hers because she makes only minimum payments while living rent-free at home and spending freely. When the father shared his excitement about the eldest’s achievement at dinner, the youngest erupted, accusing him of favoritism.
She stormed out, and now both she and the mother are giving him the silent treatment, with the wife urging him to contribute monthly to the youngest’s loans “to keep the peace.” What complicates this family conflict is the clash between rewarding responsibility and the desire for equal treatment, raising questions about enabling versus motivating adult children.

‘AITA for helping pay off one of my daughter’s student loans and not the others?’
Both daughters graduated with similar debt and landed comparable jobs.



Their debt repayment strategies couldn’t have been more different.


The father decided to reward the eldest’s milestone with a generous surprise.






This situation highlights a classic parenting dilemma: treating adult children equally versus equitably. The eldest daughter demonstrated discipline and sacrifice, achieving a major financial milestone ahead of schedule. The father’s gift acknowledged that effort, serving as positive reinforcement for responsible behavior. In contrast, the youngest benefits from substantial indirect support—free housing, utilities, and food—yet chooses leisure spending over accelerated repayment.
Critics might argue for strict equality, but fairness often means rewarding effort rather than outcome alone. Enabling the youngest with direct payments risks reinforcing poor financial habits and breeding entitlement. The wife’s push for monthly contributions appears rooted in conflict avoidance rather than long-term growth for the daughter.
Socially, this reflects broader generational discussions about student debt, parental support in adulthood, and teaching fiscal responsibility. Many families face similar tensions when one child thrives through hard choices while another leans on ongoing aid. Ultimately, the father’s approach encourages independence; caving to demands could delay the youngest’s maturity while undermining the lesson that diligence pays off—literally.
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
Many users supported the father, pointing out he’s already helping the youngest more through free housing.
![[Reddit User] − NTA. Just say you’ll give her 1k when her debt is down to 500 dollars. Problem solved.](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1767584206168-1.webp)









Several suggested fair compromises, like matching the gift when the youngest reaches the same milestone.
![[Reddit User] − NTA. You maybe could offer to do the same for her, as in make her final payment for her when she gets it below $1k. But she’s...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1767584265168-1.webp)


A few urged stronger boundaries, including charging rent to encourage responsibility.












The online community largely sided with the father, agreeing that rewarding hard work and fiscal discipline is fairer than handing out equal cash regardless of effort—especially when the youngest already receives significant indirect support.
Would you have made the same surprise gift to the hardworking daughter? How do you draw the line between helping adult children equally and rewarding responsibility? Have you faced similar family tension over money and perceived favoritism?
