AITA for not paying for my girlfriend’s kids, despite earning more?

What happens when money rules clash with kindness in a new relationship? Plenty of people draw firm lines about finances early on, especially when kids are involved. A 32-year-old man earning a solid income has been dating a single mom for just two months. He insists on splitting shared costs evenly, no matter the income gap, and refuses to cover anything for her four children since the relationship is still fresh.

Tension flared during a simple McDonald’s trip suggested by the kids. He paid only for himself while she covered the rest, leading to visible embarrassment and later hurt feelings on her side. He stands by his principles of personal responsibility, but the situation raises real questions about generosity, expectations, and dating someone with children.

‘AITA for not paying for my girlfriend’s kids, despite earning more?’

The man introduces himself, his girlfriend, and his strict financial boundaries in the early relationship.

I (M, 32) have been dating a fantastic woman for a few months who has multiple children from a previous relationship. While our relationship is blossoming, we've hit a financial...

For context, I earn six figures, while she earns significantly less. I've always held a belief in splitting mutual expenses 50/50, even if there's an income disparity.

However, I've been staunch in my stance that I shouldn’t contribute to her children's expenses because we're still in the early stages of our relationship.

He describes the specific McDonald’s outing that sparked the disagreement.

Here's a recent example: We all went to McDonald's for a quick bite. I covered my meal, and she had to pay for herself and all of her kids. She...

While I did offer to buy the extra item, I didn't pitch in for the rest of their meals. She later told me that she felt I could've been more...

Additional edits clarify details about the relationship timeline, his finances, and his views on the situation.

I understand where she's coming from, but I believe in personal responsibility. My upbringing taught me the value of money, and I feel that her children's expenses are her responsibility.....

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Edit: 4 children. McDonald’s was the children’s idea that she agreed to. The McDonald’s meals were nearly $50 just for the children. We’ve been together for 2ish months.

Edit: I like the girl and I like her kids. They are cool children. To those asking if I want to marry the girl or see a long future with...

Edit3: it was not my idea to be involved with the children this early

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Final edit: yes, I make 6 figures pre tax. After taxes about 40% immediately disappears into my retirement accounts to max them out. After that another 30% goes to my...

With the remaining 30% 10% gets saved for charity. The remaining 20% covers my own groceries (I typically cook for myself) and my own hobbies. I am not swimming in...

The core tension arises from differing views on financial fairness in a brand-new relationship involving children. The man maintains a strict 50/50 split on shared costs and refuses to fund his girlfriend’s four kids, citing the short two-month timeline and personal financial discipline. The girlfriend feels his higher income should prompt more generosity, particularly when her budget strains in front of the children. The disagreement highlights mismatched expectations around dating parents and money.

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He prioritizes independence and long-term security, allocating income heavily toward retirement, housing, savings, and charity. This leaves limited discretionary funds despite the headline salary. She faces the practical burden of raising four children on less income, where small outings quickly add up. The early introduction of kids adds complexity, as he did not initiate that step.

Relationship expert Dr. John Gottman has noted that “financial compatibility is one of the strongest predictors of long-term relationship success, but it requires mutual understanding of each partner’s values and constraints rather than rigid rules.” (The Gottman Institute) Here, the rigid 50/50 approach clashes with the reality of unequal resources and family responsibilities.

Practical steps forward include an honest talk about money philosophies before more family outings. He could suggest low-cost or no-cost dates initially, or offer non-financial gestures like cooking together. If the relationship progresses, gradual shifts toward proportional contributions might feel fairer. For now, clear boundaries prevent resentment, but flexibility shows care without overcommitting early.

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Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

The online community divided sharply on this early-relationship money dispute. Many criticized the man’s strict stance as lacking basic kindness, while others defended his right to protect his finances given the short timeline.

A significant group called him the asshole, arguing that generosity matters more than strict equality when incomes differ so much, especially with kids involved:

BionicGimpster − In theory N T A . You haven’t been dating long and aren’t in a committed long term relationship. Hopefully, your girlfriend is getting child support from their...

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For Christ’s sake- it’s a GD happy meal. Shoot- if I saw a stranger struggling to pay for a happy meal, I’d pay for it. You’re grandstanding on principle, but...

Cheeseballfondue − First, the 50/50 rule is mean if one person makes far more than the other, so you might want to read up on 'equity' vs. 'equality'. Second, break...

If you're already nickel and diming children on a trip to McDonalds with this "fantastic woman", you're a cheap b__tard who cares more about $50 than about the fantastic woman.

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And that's fine, you're 100% within your rights, just recognize that in yourself and cut her loose, because she is never, ever going to be able to do 50/50 with...

ThatBFjax − What in the Bebe’s kids is this. “Multiple children” what, does she have more than you can count? And why are the kids coming with you on dates...

To continue dating her but if she brings the kids they have to watch you eat and get whatever they can afford? YTA, don’t date people with kids

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DueIsland2983 − YTA I've always held a belief in splitting mutual expenses 50/50, even if there's an income disparity. However, I've been staunch in my stance that I shouldn’t contribute...

That's an a__hole position; if you make that much more than she did then the cost of an outing has much less an impact on you than it does on...

To you lunch for four at McDonalds might be something you don't need to think about while to her it could hurt her overall budget. You need to be aware...

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Others supported the man fully, emphasizing the brief relationship length and questioning why kids were included so soon:

BlueGlue39 − NTA it's weird that OP has met her kids so soon into the relationship and I definitely wouldn't expect someone I'd known for five minutes to be paying...

JomolaMomo − I don't understand all the YTA comments. It's a 2 month old relationship. Why should OP be responsible for feeding the kids of a person he just started...

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At worst I would say ESH because a conversation could have happened when the kids asked for McDonalds, where Mom could have said she was tight on money. The OP...

But to think he should have paid because he's the dude, he makes more money than she does, or whatever your convoluted and misguided brains came up with, OP is...

Baron_MM − NTA - She could have said no to taking the kids to McDonalds and then said no for the extra item.

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Trevena_Ice − NTA. Although I would say, in later time of a relationship the 50/50 rule should fall, it is your decission and I think you told her that before....

cammyboy1980 − NTA - But why even get involved. Find a more compatible partner without the baggage.

The remaining comments mixed neutral takes, pointed questions about the setup, or skepticism about the post itself:

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[Reddit User] − Why are her children present on your dates if you are in the early stages of your relationship?

Relevant-Current-870 − 50/50 despite income disparity are you serious?

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Missepus − NAH Not the a__hole, but perhaps soon an ex? While I agree that a relationship needs balance, this is perhaps not the way to do it? If she...

Not a large cost, a generous gesture, but something she could reciprocate at a later point? If you stay with her you will not be able to keep this up,...

Disastrous-Nail-640 − ESH. You could have offered to pitch in. But she sucks for introducing you to her children when you’ve only been dating two-ish months. All the research and...

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[Reddit User] − 2 months and you've met the kids?

yoruichithetoadsage − So sick of the fake posts. Literally the name… and check the profile. 4 days ago they were 26 with a gf of 3 years…. K

This story underscores how financial boundaries can quickly test compatibility, especially when one partner has children. Sticking to principles protects personal stability, but small acts of kindness often build stronger connections than rigid rules. The early involvement of kids adds pressure that many feel comes too soon.

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It prompts thought about balancing self-interest with empathy in dating. Would you expect a partner to cover costs for your children early on, or wait until commitment deepens? How do you handle money differences when one person earns significantly more?

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