AITA for kicking out my 15 year old daughter for getting pregnant?

Family life can get incredibly complicated, especially in blended homes where old wounds mix with new beginnings. Here, a dad is at his wit’s end after his 15-year-old daughter drops a life-changing revelation—she’s pregnant and determined to keep the baby. He’s pushing for other paths and even wondering if showing her the door might force some grown-up perspective.

The stakes feel sky-high, with echoes of divorce trauma, sibling dynamics, and the weight of unexpected responsibilities. Social media folks are chiming in with passion, debating where support ends and enabling begins. The twists in opinions keep things riveting, pulling at heartstrings on all sides.

'AITA for kicking out my 15 year old daughter for getting pregnant?'

Years of ups and downs set the stage, starting from a painful divorce that reshaped everything for young Lucy.

My daughter, who we’ll call Lucy, has been struggling with behavior since her mom and I divorced when she was 7. The divorce was tough on her, and it became...

Now Lucy sees her mom maybe once a year and talks to her every few months. When Lucy was 10, I remarried. At first, she seemed excited about having a...

She started skipping class, spending a lot of time away from home, and dating older teens while still in middle school. She’s been in therapy and on medication, and things...

The tension boiled over just days ago with a sit-down that no one saw coming.

A few days ago, Lucy sat my wife and me down to share that she’s pregnant and plans to keep the baby. She had been hiding it for months, thinking...

She said the father won’t be involved and that she wants to take responsibility for her child. I was deeply upset. I suggested she consider adoption or other options. Lucy...

I was deeply upset. I suggested she consider adoption or other options. Lucy refused and asked for our support, saying she wants to own her mistake rather than walk away.

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I know Lucy—she struggles to manage her own responsibilities, let alone a child’s. She’s hinted that she expects my wife, who’s a full-time mom to our toddlers, to help raise...

With two little ones already, I don’t think it’s fair to add this to my wife’s plate. I’m disappointed that Lucy wasn’t honest sooner and didn’t think this through. I’ve...

but I worry she won’t learn from this and will keep facing tough consequences. I’m wondering if asking her to leave might help her understand the reality of her choices....

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Pushing back against the backlash, the dad clarified his frustrations and limits in a quick update.

EDIT: It seems the community feels I’d be in the wrong. So what should I do instead? I didn’t plan to raise another child, and we don’t have the resources...

People may not realize how hard it is to parent a struggling teen who now expects full support for a baby. Local laws also say I’m responsible for her until...

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This situation exemplifies how children process parental abandonment and family restructuring through behavioral problems

Lucy's escalating issues coincide perfectly with major family disruptions: her mother's departure overseas and her father's remarriage with new children. These aren't coincidental patterns.

Dr. Kristin Neff, author of “Self-Compassion” and researcher in family psychology, notes that “when children act out, they’re often communicating needs they can’t articulate. The behavior is the symptom, not the disease.” Lucy’s dating older teens, skipping school, and general rebelliousness all signal a child seeking attention and validation she feels she’s lost at home. The father describes putting her in therapy and on medication, but these interventions treat symptoms without addressing the core issue: Lucy feels replaced and abandoned by both parents.

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The father’s response to Lucy’s pregnancy reveals his focus remains on his own inconvenience rather than his daughter’s welfare. His edit emphasizes “I didn’t choose this” and “I didn’t plan to raise another child” multiple times, while barely acknowledging that Lucy, at 15, certainly didn’t plan this either. His concern centers on protecting his current wife from additional burden, yet he seems oblivious to how his prioritization of his new family has contributed to Lucy’s desperate attempts to feel valued and loved.

Kicking out a pregnant minor isn’t tough love, it’s abandonment wrapped in justification. Lucy needs guidance, support, and clear boundaries about expectations, not homelessness. The father’s legal and moral obligations extend beyond providing shelter until 18; they include helping this child navigate an extremely difficult situation she’s clearly unprepared to handle alone. Whether Lucy keeps the baby or considers other options, she needs parents who show up for her rather than look for exits.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Users pointed out the fundamental problem with the father’s approach, emphasizing his legal and moral obligations to his minor daughter.

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QueenMoogle − YTA. She is a CHILD my dude. If she is barely responsible for herself, as you say, how well do you think she’ll do out on the streets?...

However kicking out your *minor* daughter when she is still legally your responsibility is fucked. And furthermore, the way OP talks about this kid both in post and comment is...

MakeAutomata − YTa, If you kick out your 15 year old you are the a__hole. There are no other words that can surround the sentence that justify it.

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Darth_Mufasa − YTA, 100%. You are her parent, start acting like it. You said her behavior was bad before this, you knew she was acting out and behaving dangerously. So...

You should have nipped this behavior in the bud ages ago. Yes shes barely responsible for herself, because shes a kid! YOU are the one responsible for her. But now...

Several commenters challenged the father to examine his own role in Lucy’s behavioral problems and current situation.

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0000udeis000 − YTA and honestly, you sound like a terrible parent. Your daughter is a child, she is in the scariest situation in her life - a life that sounds...

Her "behavioural issues" were an obvious cry for help and you dropped the f__king ball. She is a minor, and is legally your responsibility, if nothing else. When she told...

Did you tell her you loved her? That you support her? That you understood that she was scared, but that it was going to be okay? In all that time...

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To let her know that it was safe to talk to you, even about the hard stuff. Maybe I'm reading the situation wrong. Maybe you were angry when you posted...

But you will be making the biggest mistake of your life if you kick her out, when she needs you the most. Shame on you. ​ ​ EDIT: Well, I...

I'd like to clarify and state that of course I don't think it's okay that a 15 year old got pregnant - but accidents happen, and people make mistakes. Teenagers...

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It's a parent's job to help guide them. And writing a child off as a "problem child" does more harm than good. This girl has had a lot of upheaval...

I do not think that OP is solely to blame - he's part of it of course, but the mother and step-mother are equally culpable, as they are all parents...

(Yes, step-mothers are parents when they marry someone with a young child, and are especially important when the birth mother is absent. ) OP - I'm sorry I didn't get...

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I get that you're scared. Of course you are, that's why you flipped. But I promise you, as excited or arrogant as she may seem about this, she's scared too....

I know you "didn't sign up" for another kid, but she didn't sign up for her parents splitting up, or her mother taking off on her, or her father starting...

but 10 year old brains are not rational and unless you did a loooot of talking and emotional legwork with her one-on-one that you just happened to leave out of...

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.. It really doesn't seem like she's an inherently bad person, just one who was starved for attention. This is absolutely a terrible way to get it, and I wish...

And yes, babies are hard, and expensive, and this is going to change things for everyone especially her. But it will be so much harder for everyone if choose anger...

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Lustle13 − So I'm addressing this after your edit. And I'm going to be point blank with you, but I'll start gentle. Read through your post and edit. Notice how...

To be short, you're f__king self centered. Extremely. Look at your edit "Why am **I** the villain", etc. You say I or Me (in regards to Lucy and her kid)...

That's you. Right now. You're worried that you can't pay for it. Not how Lucy will pay for it the next 18 years if she's on her own. You're worried...

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But you make no mention of Lucy and whether she signed up for it (more on this later). You're worried about how you're responsible for Lucy till she turns 18....

You didn't sign up for a child. Did Lucy? Did you even f__king ask her? Do you even know how she ended up pregnant? She's been hanging around older guys,...

Do you even know the guy? Does Lucy? Do you even know how all of this came to happen? F__k, **do you even know what is going on in your...

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And it's no struggle to see Lucy turned out the way she did. I was gunna type out a whole thing about why kids act out, the psychology of it...

Judgmental. And probably break one of the rules of the sub. Not to mention I imagine it won't have much effect on someone who *considers kicking out a pregnant 15...

So I'll say this. Sit down. Clear your head. And spend fifteen minutes of your obviously important life imagining you are Lucy. Imagine your mom completely disappearing from your life...

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When you don't really understand why she left, and (most likely) think that she doesn't love you, as mom no longer has time for you in her new life. Imagine...

And that people are *finally* looking at, and paying attention to you. Attention you wish mom was around to give you. Imagine that your sole parental figure is a man,...

And, oh! now he's married again and has other kids, and less time for you. Better act out more for more attention. Imagine that boys give you attention. They say...

Everything feels better when they talk to you, and you don't worry as much. Now older boys come along. Oh my, their so *cool* and *sophisticated* and they *drive* and...

They always seem to support you, even when dad doesn't. It's been a while since you've heard things like that. ... Now. Imagine you're sitting down at a table with...

I mean **f__king scared shitless**. It probably took a week to get the courage up just to ask them to sit down. You're the resident f__k up, you know it,...

But you've made a choice, and you're sure of that choice, and for once, **just for f__king once** you'd like to have support in it. .... Now open your eyes....

Some users offered more nuanced perspectives, acknowledging the difficulty while still emphasizing the father’s responsibility.

minahmyu − YTA it's now mainly due to your replies. "I have other kids to worry about" "I don't want to burden my family with another child. " (something about...

and saying it's all due to the mom abandoning her doesn't seem entirely it. Even by the way the original post is worded, it seems like you were trying to...

​ I know you're probably fed up as a person to deal with the daily BS she probably does and wanna pawn her off to another family member but it's...

Like, my cousin pawned his mom and sister's stuff, stealing money, getting drunk/high, beat them up one time and my aunt still tries to be there (where is that line...

But I think you need to acknowledge what role you and wife had in this situation because yall could've been ignoring her too. ​ Why not contact mom and see...

iBeFloe − So. .. Knew she was mentally not well after you guys divorced Mom moves overseas (WTF? !) You got new wife & suddenly had a new infant in...

I need INFO on this, you’re too vague. She was mentally unstable & needed FAMILY therapy. She didn’t just need solo-therapy, she needed YOU. I’m going with YTA, BIG TIME....

Way to let your kid know you don’t give 2 shits. But for the situation you’re asking about, YOU such major ass. Children need time to adjust to major changes...

You gave no real timeline, but based on what I’ve read I’m reading that you only gave a f__k about you. No s__t a VERY YOUNG child will have issues...

All you cared about is how tough it’ll be to have another baby in the house for the new wife & YOU. Not once did you think about how your...

She’s a CHILD. A really messed up child. She doesn’t want to get rid of her baby, but doesn’t understand that she needs to take some kind of responsibility &...

She definitely needs to get it together, but at the end of the day she’s a dumbass only because you fucked her up. If you kick her out, you’re basically...

Some comments from other users.

Styrofoam505 − NTA I look forward to my negative karma. Your daughter is a definite a__hole, but is legally not allowed to be kicked out. She should be filling for...

If she is making this choice you should hold your ground and state you do not intend to take care of the child as this is her choice, that you...

and then be kicking her out.If you see she is neglecting her child, you yourself can call CPS and have her declared an unfit mother and they will take the...

She is taking advantage and this is an opportunity on your front to give her the kick on the ass that the rest of the world will at 18. Try...

t3hd0n − YTA i really hope this is a shitpost.

wmnoe − Yeah, I'm so sorry, but YTA if you kick her out. Her behavior is all based on your poor parenting decisions. Who the hell ALLOWS their middle school...

Where was the supervision? Let me guess, you and Step mom were too busy with new kids? BE HER FATHER, because clearly you haven't been for 15 years so far.

[Reddit User] − ESH She’s old enough to think of the consequences of her actions and take some responsibility for what happened. It’s not fair that it should fall on...

I think you should sit her down and figure out a complete budget for the first few years of the baby’s life, including health insurance and childcare.

Get one of those fake babies (her school may even let you borrow one, I’d ask) and make her take care of it for a week so she can experience...

Talk to her about careers that she’s shown interest in, and help her realize how hard it would be to both pursue a career and raise a child.

Be adamant that while you will make sure she has a roof over her head and food to eat until she turns eighteen, you will not be responsible for her...

You can even warn her that if she does not care for the baby on her own and tries to shunt the care off on you, you will call CPS...

Once she realizes that she’s not going to get handouts for the baby from you and sees how expensive and time consuming it will be to raise a child, she...

Norrhill − YTA. She is going through the hardest point of her life. Call her and end this nonsense waiting for Reddit to tell you what to do.

Nnryann − I’m sure someone already mentioned this, but she was probably acting out because you basically created a new family. She probably feels very lonely and left out. Her...

and you probably put her at the bottom of the list with your new wife and kids and now you want to kick her out. She’s a child and is...

[Reddit User] − Yta shes your child, she did the right thing by sitting you down. Think about why she hid it from you. Not that she hid it from...

Sure you could kick her out, but know that you turned your back on your daughter after inadvertantly pushing her out for a new wife and children. proper therapy in...

You are not responsible for the baby but you should be accountable for your child. Despite "behavior" problems and all.

pilotlad21 − ESH Why are there no ESH’s here? ?? This 15 year old kid is being incredibly immature and irresponsible to want her father and MIL to put a...

I also feel she might sing a different tune about being a mother a month or so after birth, so probably shelve the decision until then.

This story reveals what happens when parents prioritize comfort over their children’s needs. Lucy’s pregnancy isn’t just a teenage mistake; it’s the result of years feeling abandoned and replaced. Her father’s instinct to evict her confirms what she’s likely felt for years: she’s expendable when inconvenient. Lucy didn’t choose the disruptions that shaped her adolescence, but her father repeatedly chose his new family over her pain. What would you do if your struggling teenager made a life-altering mistake?

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