AITA for not paying back my mom the full amount?
A young adult built a $10,000 savings nest egg by age 18, only to discover it vanished from a joint account without warning. The culprits—his own mother and older sibling—drained every cent for personal expenses like groceries and car payments. Confrontation led to eviction, leaving him homeless on his 20th birthday.
In addition, an old agreement to repay $4,000 for teenage braces became the final straw. He paid $2,500 before halting, viewing the theft as full settlement. What makes the story more complicated is the emotional wreckage: attempts at forgiveness clashing with betrayal from the people meant to protect him.

‘AITA for not paying back my mom the full amount?’
The savings disappeared silently from a joint account the young man never knew allowed withdrawals without his consent.


The stolen funds covered family luxuries while he faced homelessness and an uncertain future without college money.





Expecting a child to repay medical expenses like braces defies basic parental duty and sets a toxic precedent.
The mother and sibling emptied $10,000 meant for the poster’s future, framing it as entitlement despite his minor status when braces were fitted. Opposing arguments might claim joint accounts imply shared access, yet this ignores power imbalances and the poster’s ignorance of terms. Morally, draining a teen’s life savings constitutes theft, especially without notice or discussion. The eviction amplified abandonment.
What makes the story more complicated is the poster’s internalized guilt over an invalid “debt” from age 14, when parents hold legal responsibility for healthcare. Broader society increasingly debates financial abuse within families, particularly via joint accounts used as control tools.
In addition, withholding the remaining $1,500 asserts boundaries after trauma. As family therapist Dr. John Gottman explains in a Psychology Today piece, “Financial betrayal erodes trust foundational to any relationship, often requiring complete separation to heal.”
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
Most social media users condemned the family, insisting no child owes parents for basic care and the theft canceled any agreement.









A couple of responses reframed the braces as parental obligation while urging permanent distance over legal fights.



Light-hearted yet firm takes highlighted the absurdity without softening the betrayal.



The poster lost his life savings to family theft, faced homelessness, and rightfully halted brace repayments after betrayal erased any moral debt. Civil contact persists, but deep resentment underscores irreparable trust.
When does parental “help” cross into exploitation? How can young adults protect finances from family overreach?
