AITA for “hiding” my saving from my fiancé?

A 24-year-old man’s engagement took an unexpected turn after he revealed he had more than $160,000 in savings. What he saw as responsible financial planning quickly became a source of tension with his fiancée, who felt blindsided by the disclosure. The couple had been together for two years and recently began discussing buying a home. When she said they did not have enough money for a deposit, he shared that he had substantial savings.

Instead of celebrating the news, she became frustrated, believing he had kept important information from her. He insists he was simply raised not to discuss personal finances until marriage. Now, with silence stretching between them, he turned to a social network to ask whether keeping his savings private until their engagement made him the one in the wrong.

‘AITA for “hiding” my saving from my fiancé?’

He thought engagement was the right time to talk money.

I recently got engaged to my fiancé after 2 years of dating, and told her we should probably start looking at houses.

She told me that we didn’t have the money for a deposit on a mortgage, but I personally have a lot of money in savings. It’s a little bit more...

My girlfriend was initially just shocked because it is a lot of money for a 24 year old to have saved (I’ve been extremely lucky in life). After a couple...

He insists he never meant to keep secrets from her.

I told her that I didn’t hide it from her, I was just raised to not talk about personal finances with anyone other than someone you’re married to,

and I figured engaged is close enough that I’m happy to talk about it. I also said that I had actually used these saving to help her before,

(I’ve paid her rent a few times when she couldn’t and paid a couple thousand dollars for her dog to get surgery). She was still quite angry and has been...

Now he is unsure whether he should admit fault.

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My parents don’t see the problem (duh), her parents understand my perspective but think I should have told her when we moved in together last year.

None of our friends know because I don’t feel comfortable talking about it with them. I’ve already asked her if we can talk about it when she’s ready and she...

I don’t think this is relationship ending, but I know she probably wants me to admit I was wrong. I don’t think I’ve done anything wrong. So I’m asking you...

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In this case, the conflict does not revolve around debt or financial irresponsibility, but timing and trust. From his perspective, savings are private until marriage formalizes shared responsibility. Engagement marked the moment he felt comfortable opening that conversation. His reasoning aligns with many cultural and family norms that treat personal assets as separate until legal commitment.

However, cohabitation changes expectations. Moving in together often signals a merging of lives, even if finances remain technically separate. His fiancée may feel that withholding knowledge of substantial savings during shared living arrangements created an imbalance. She might question whether full honesty existed in previous financial discussions, even if he never directly lied.

Opposing views center on fairness and perception. Some may argue that savings should not influence shared monthly expenses. Others may believe that discussing assets earlier builds mutual planning and prevents misunderstanding. This situation highlights a broader social issue: couples frequently enter serious commitments without clearly defining financial boundaries. Transparent conversations, ideally before engagement, can reduce emotional fallout and strengthen trust moving forward.

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Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Many commenters supported his decision and urged caution.

SupportThink5303 − nta. ..and for the love of f__king god, do not marry her without a prenuptial agreement. Don't say you haven't been warned.

pineboxwaiting − NTA Why, exactly, is she upset? You need to ask her this and listen closely to her response. She may think that because you have a comfortable savings,...

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This isn’t true. You pay your way with your earnings, not your savings. Knowing about your savings should not change any part of her life at all. So, why is...

If anything, this is a happy surprise. Had you been drowning in secret debt, she would have reason to be annoyed. As it is, though? What’s her problem?

MycologistNeither470 − Definitely a better surprise than discovering your husband/fiancé has thousands of dollars in unpaid debts that are now becoming yours as well NTA At some point you need...

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That point, in my opinion, is when you decide on marriage. .. which means when you get engaged. Prior to that, it is just not needed and it can be...

You do need to know the economic habits of your partner. .. but knowing that he can help you with rent with little or no notice, that he is never...

The magnitude of his savings is irrelevant until marriage enters the picture. .. And that is where significant differences in wealth or in financial discipline should lead to a pre-nup.

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throwaway1_2_0_2_1 − NAH. I get your point but when you start cohabitating and combining lives, that’s a big step towards a serious future together.

When my ex and I lived together, we split expenses by income and savings to have the lifestyle we wanted but we were also budget conscious. My guess?

Your fiancée feels like either you weren’t splitting things equally OR, she spent time feeling guilty when you helped her out, thinking she was more of a burden on your...

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ParsimoniousSalad − NTA. I think at the point of getting engaged and thinking about your future with her, that would be the time to share financial information.

I'm confused why she thinks it was her business before this. I'm not trying to be snarky, but I'd like to ask her why she wanted to know sooner. What...

Others offered more balanced perspectives about trust and timing

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teresajs − NTA You aren't married yet, so your money is your business. It would be understandable to have a discussion about both of your financial situations by this point...

Her reaction feels a little too much... As if she would have wanted you to give her financial support or something if she had known you had so much.

This is definitely a red flag. I recommend that you don't buy a house together until married, and that the two of you both contribute to the down payment and...

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feminerdy − I don’t think you’re the a__hole, in that it seems a bit strong of a word based solely on your post. At the same time, it’s also fair...

Because regardless of how you were raised, you made a conscious decision to not share it with her during any past discussions about the financial realities of cohabitating, the future...

I think you need to take accountability for that, apologize, and ask what she needs from you to be able to move forward and feel like you trust her again.

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Impossible_Trainer48 − These Reddit comments already made her a gold digging whore. Like come on if she was a gold digging whore she wouldn’t have been with him in the...

I think her problem is that she thinks that you lied to her or maybe that you purposely hid it and she thinks that you have maybe hidden other things...

Or maybe she is embarrassed that you can help buy a house and she can’t and that’s why she is angry ( at herself)

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A few responses leaned blunt or lighthearted.

[Reddit User] − INFO: you say you don't talk about personal finances, but you moved in together a year ago? Did you talk about bills/finances at that point?

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Did the discussion cover anything beyond simply assigning responsibility for certain bills (e. g. you pay for electricity, she pays for cable, etc)?

Most important question: did you willfully conceal, omit the truth, or directly lie about your savings? Edit: based on OP's answers, NTA

McRando42 − NTA. Get a new fiance. This one is not ready to be an adult.

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This engagement dispute highlights how financial expectations can differ even in committed relationships. One partner viewed savings as private until marriage, while the other saw cohabitation as the point where deeper transparency should begin. Neither perspective is inherently unreasonable, yet misaligned expectations created tension.

When should couples disclose detailed financial information? Is engagement the natural starting point, or does living together require earlier honesty? And how should partners balance privacy with openness when planning a shared future?

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