AITA for refusing to buy my ex-wife furniture?

A father, divorced for five years, turned down his ex-wife’s request for $6,000 to replace living room furniture, appliances, and paint the exterior of her house—arguing the upgrades are for common areas, not the children’s rooms, despite their 50/50 custody arrangement. He already covers private school tuition, health insurance, medical costs, sports, and more, leaving her with minimal direct child support but little leftover cash.

What makes the story more complicated is the ex-wife’s reasoning: since the kids spend half their time there, he should contribute to making her home more comfortable. He compares it to detailing her car just because the children ride in it, insisting her current furnishings are functional, if outdated, and the request feels like subsidizing her lifestyle.

AITA for refusing to buy my ex-wife furniture?’

The father outlines the financial agreement established during their divorce.

We divorced five years ago. I don't pay a lot in child support because I buy 100% of our sons' private school, health insurance/costs, sports, etc.

Between what I pay in child support and what my ex's earnings, she breaks even at the end of the month. So while I cover most expenses, she gets very...

So while I have a decent cash flow, I pay for most things and she has little cash flow, she doesn't pay for most things. That's what we agreed and...

His ex-wife recently requested significant funds for home improvements benefiting shared spaces.

Recently she asked for $6,000. She said that I should help pay to furnish her house since our kids live there 50% of the time.

She wants to replace the living room furniture, some appliances and paint the outside of her house. NOT anything in their kids' rooms, just the "common areas" of her house.

He flatly refused, viewing the upgrades as unnecessary and not his responsibility.

I told her absolutely not. Not even partial. I have the money. I just don't want to give her money to basically decorate her house.

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I feel like it's asking me to pay to have her car washed and detailed because our kids are driven in her car. Sure, her furnishings are old but it's...

This scenario illustrates common post-divorce financial tensions, where court-ordered agreements define support but gray areas—like home upkeep in shared custody—spark disputes. The father fulfills and exceeds his obligations by directly covering major child-related costs, allowing the mother financial breathing room without extra cash transfers.

Many see her request as overreach: maintaining a livable home falls under each parent’s responsibility during their custody time, especially for aesthetic or non-essential upgrades. Comparisons to personal vehicle maintenance highlight the boundary—children benefiting indirectly doesn’t obligate funding adult lifestyle choices.

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On the other side, some argue stark lifestyle disparities between homes can affect children emotionally, potentially fostering resentment. Yet legally and ethically, absent safety issues or court revisions, parents aren’t required to equalize household comforts beyond agreed support.

See what others had to share with OP:

Many users backed the father, calling the request entitled and beyond his agreed responsibilities.

avatarfan007 − NTA, she’s not entitled to demand money to buy furniture for herself, and using your son as an excuse is just low

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KohtaFiontan − NTA. It's not really your responsibility to pay for the furniture as long as you pay what you agreed upon in court, which you are doing.

I would understand her asking for it if it was for your children's rooms but for just the common area I would only understand it if the old furniture would've...

Havershamhouse − I mean, it sounds like there's already furniture she just wants different furniture soooo NTA.

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Maybe buy things solely for your kids rooms? Single or a small double bed each, new drawers etc, make their rooms cozy for them. Your ex wife is not your...

Just because you have money, doenst mean you have to spend it on her just because she demands it and feels entitled to it. No wonder you divorced

gringaellie − NTA she can buy a piece at a time, or second hand. It's not your job.

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TUGrad − Nta, you are already paying for 100% of your child's expenses, giving her money, and you have them 50% of the time. The fact that she would even...

Make sure to keep all communication/texts/ect. in case she starts talking about going to court for more money since you said no.

A couple of commenters urged reflection on financial disparities or sought specifics on necessities.

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smokedcashew − I'm not offering judgement on this as I think more info needed here. But before you denounce her as 'money grabbing' as others have, I'd encourage you reflect...

For example, did she take a career break when your children were little which limits her earnings? Does she now work part-time in order to be home for childcare?

Has she given up a more lucrative career for flexible working as a mother? You said she breaks even at the month. What kind of lifestyle does she have?

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Does she actually have any money she could save towards this a month? Or is she simply scraping by, living paycheck to paycheck (beyond you covering private school, etc. ).

If your lifestyles are very different (i.e. you have disposable income, your ex-wife does not), your kids lifestyles will be very different between the houses. They'll notice this and remember...

And they'll remember how their father left their mother to struggle. Yes she's your ex-wife, but she's also the mother of your children and the home where they spend 50%...

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Could you not replace anything that needs replacing (not just for aesthetic values)? Because it's not 'her' house, it's 'her and your children's' house.

[Reddit User] − INFO what appliances? If she's asking for like, an air conditioner or a fridge you'd probably be TA because your kids kind of need those

Others added sharp or practical takes on boundaries and potential leverage.

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Nefertiti_2020 − She said that I should help pay to furnish her house since our kids live there 50% of the time.

If she is unable to provide a good living situation for your sons tell her you'd be happy to revise the custody situation and she wouldn't have to have them...

Because providing her children with a proper place to stay during her time is HER responsibility. If she can't do that, the sons' would be better off staying at your...

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silently_here − NTA - you paid for 50% of the furniture. It’s at your house.

AmyBaby-96 − NTA - you really shouldn’t have to pay her anything if you’re covering costs for child and have him 50% of the time. . she can source cheap...

The father’s refusal aligned with his court agreement and drew strong support for maintaining clear boundaries post-divorce. While some highlighted potential lifestyle gaps affecting the children, the upgrades were largely seen as wants, not needs.

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Would you contribute to an ex’s home improvements for the kids’ sake in shared custody? How do you draw the line between child-focused expenses and subsidizing an ex’s lifestyle—especially when one parent covers most direct costs?

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