AITA for refusing to give any more money to my dad after finding out he bought a house for my brother?

A few years back, a tight-knit family rallied around their dad, a man sidelined by health woes from a tough job, armed with a hefty $400k+ settlement to secure his future. His five sons, including a 32-year-old with a steady income, chipped in monthly for rent and bills, happy to ease his load alongside his other benefits—no sweat, just love for the guy who raised them.

Then, a bombshell dropped via an aunt’s whisper: Dad secretly bought a house for the oldest brother, a 30-something drifter with a trail of job hops, three kids he doesn’t support, and a habit of begging cash for “rent” that fuels girlfriend getaways. Still making mortgage payments, Dad hid it for over a year. Stung by the betrayal, one son slams the wallet shut, igniting a family fire—let’s unpack this Reddit drama.

‘AITA for refusing to give any more money to my dad after finding out he bought a house for my brother?’

My dad stopped working because of health problems a few years ago due to his work. He went to court and sued the place where he worked and got a settlement. Don’t know the exact number but it was somewhere over 400k. He wanted to save that money for the future since he can’t do much physically and it would be hard for him to work again.

Myself (32M) and my 4 brothers started pitching in monthly to help with his rent and a few other bills. It really wasn’t a problem for any of us because he does receive other benefits and we earn a decent income. I never minded helping my dad understanding the position he was in. Recently we learned my dad has been helping my brother.

He’s the oldest out of all of us and never done anything with himself. He was close to 30 when my mom kicked him out of their house due to him refusing to help with bills before she passed. He moved out of state, works at a new place every few months, has 3 kids he doesn’t pay child support for and anytime we hear from him it’s to ask us for money.

My dad always had a soft spot for him and helped him no matter how much he asked for. Even if it’s 5k he said he needed to catch up on rent that he ends up using to take a girlfriend on vacation. We’ve all cut him out of our lives but I learned from my aunt that my dad purchased a house for him over a year ago and he didn’t want us to know about it.

My dad still makes the mortgage payments. To say I was very pissed was an understatement. I couldn’t believe all this time we were helping my dad out because he claimed he didn’t want to use too much of that money due to not working but here he was purchasing a house for our brother who’s done nothing but take money.

I confronted my dad. His usual defense was my brother being down on his luck and needing help. So in the end I told my dad I won’t be helping out with him anymore so he clearly has no problem using up his money. My brothers know about the situation.

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One is in agreement with me, but the others are getting on my case because my dad still needs help and I can’t turn my back on him. Even if I don’t agree with what he’s using his money for, we should still help because he’s our dad and he did a lot for us. So now I’m not so sure if I’m being an a**hole by pulling the plug on helping him out anymore.

This family saga simmers with hurt and hidden moves. Our 32-year-old son felt good propping up his dad, only to find him bankrolling a house for the oldest brother—a serial taker while leaning on their cash for his own bills. Dad’s soft spot for his struggling eldest clashed with the sons’ trust, and the secrecy fuels the fire. One son’s cutoff feels like a stand against a sneaky bailout.

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Money and family tangle often, especially when fairness frays. A 2022 report by the National Center for Family & Marriage Research shows 41% of adults aiding parents face strain when funds skew unevenly among siblings. Here, Dad’s choice to shield his settlement yet tap the brothers’ wallets for a deadbeat’s home tips the scales, sparking resentment. Loyalty bends under lies by omission.

Dr. Brad Klontz, a financial psychologist, notes, “When parents secretly favor one child financially, it erodes trust and fractures family bonds transparency is key to balance”. Dad’s hush-hush house buy, paired with ongoing pleas for help, muddies his sons’ goodwill. The 32-year-old’s halt isn’t cold it’s a boundary born of feeling used.

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Cooler heads can mend this. Sit Dad down, list the gripes secrecy, skewed support—and push for candor. If he needs aid, pay a bill directly, not cash to funnel elsewhere. Brothers backing Dad can step up, but no one’s tied to funding a lopsided deal. Open talk and clear lines might patch this rift, balancing love with limits.

Heres what people had to say to OP:

Reddit roared in near-unison, backing our son with fervor. The crowd sees Dad’s cash flow as plenty settlement, benefits, and enough to buy a house making the brothers’ help a pipeline to the eldest’s free ride. Hiding the purchase while pocketing their money burns, and most cheer the cutoff as a fair shake to protect his wallet.

Direct bills, not dollars, became a savvy tip, ensuring aid sticks to Dad’s needs. Some grinned at the twist: let Dad bunk with the favored son and watch the shine fade. The vibe holds firm family duty doesn’t mean fueling a deadbeat via a sneaky middleman.

noonecaresat805 − Nta. If he can pay your brothers mortgage and I’m betting other bills then I’m sure he can pay his own. If anything I would just set some money aside for him for a future emergency but not tell anyone about it. Your siblings get to be mad but at the end of the day it’s your money.

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If his just going to give it to your other brother then I feel like you cannot give your dad any money or say something like I’ll help out but I’m not giving him money instead I’m going to pay this one or two bills. That way you know the money went towards actually helping your dad.

FuckUGalen − Nta - because you aren't helping your dad, you are helping your brother. Your dad is just the middle man.

risssa391 − NTA. Like, at all. My grandmother who is an grade A enabler has a soft spot for her youngest (she’s a mess, big time and in the worst ways). Its always the same story. Lies, false promises, bad habits, fighting.. the works. But like clockwork, my gma still gives her another chance.

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It had been taking a toll on me for years because I was raised by gma and hated seeing her deal with the stress and pain of it all. But finally, and it a longgg awhile, (I’m almost 30) I realized that I can’t help her anymore. I want to more than anything and sometimes the guilt is absolutely there.

However, I can’t keep enduring what I’m seeing and feeling when offering to help. In my free time. On my own dime etc etc etc. Just like my aunt, I can’t help my grandmother if she doesn’t want, acknowledge and accept my help. So, I agree with your choice and I’m sorry you have to deal with this and all it’s many complexities. Good luck, stay strong but mostly importantly, NTA.

Maleficent_Ad_3958 − NTA. The money was for your dad to take care of himself. It's not to make life easy for your brother. Frankly you and the other brothers should just tell him that he should just live with the brother considering he's PAYING for the house and cut him off financially. Honestly, I think a lot of the shine of the lazy brother will come right off when the brother either refuses to live with the father or treats him like s**t.

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Infamous-Wasabi-9007 − Dad - I need your help with money. You - why?. Dad - I need to hang on to my settlement money. You - okay. Seems fair.. Dad - I need money.. You - why?. Dad - I need to buy a house for your lazy brother, who you won’t help.. You - are you serious?

NHFNCFRE − 'My dad still needs help.'. In the words of my 9yo, 'does he though?' Let's look at the facts: 1. Dad has a substantial settlement that he is choosing not to use for 'reasons.' The whole point of a settlement is to help pay for the things that your Dad cannot work to do.. 2. Dad is receiving 'other benefits' that should also be helping him with life expenses.

3. Dad has so much extra income that he is literally paying the mortgage, expenses, and utilities for a second house. Let's be clear, YOU and your brother bought the second house, not your dad. Dad may have been the middleman, but it was the money that you and your sibling are providing him that gave him the funding to do so.

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Additionally, it should be the role of the parent to help the child, not the role of the child to support the parent or the deadbeat sibling. You are NTA here. If anyone gives you grief about it, tell them you're so happy to hear how they're going to help out ol' Dad and pass on his Venmo information.

dr-sparkle − NTA. The siblings who are getting on your case can feel free to throw money at your deadbeat brother and take your dad in if necessary.

attorphous − NTA. You're giving him money to help him as he has health issues impeding him from working. You're not giving him money to send to your brother for his vacations. Make a list of all the issues you have, sit down with him and lay out all the reasons.

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If the family calls you an AH, then have a sit down with them all after a private one with your dad and address all their grievances. They are more than welcome to support your brother via your dad, both of whom are lying by omission about the money you send... specially your dad for buying a house for your brother and hiding it.

helendestroy − my dad still needs help Lol yeah because he went and got a mortgage on a house he's not even living in. If they think your dad needs money that much, they can fund it.

brotogeris1 − NTA, and this is great news because you’re free! Dad clearly doesn’t need any $ from you when he’s buying deadbeat loser bro a house (a flipping HOUSE!) You and bro that are in agreement should feel free to snap your wallets shut. The brother that wants to continue to funnel cash to the deadbeat loser via dad should continue to do that,  since that’s what they want.

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Dad had $400K rattling around. He clearly didn’t need anyone’s financial help. They’ve made choices, kept them secret to keep the $ rolling in, which is a gross betrayal, and now they get to live the consequences of those choices.

Your dad has done you and your siblings dirty, that’s the painful truth. He’s doing no favors for deadbeat either. Feel no guilt about cutting them off. Don’t listen to any pressure from anyone. Hold firm. All the best to you.

This cash clash weaves a raw family tale—sons propped up a dad in need, only to uncover his secret splurge on a house for a wayward brother. Trust cracked under hidden deeds, pushing one son to lock his wallet, a move splitting the clan. A dose of honesty and tight boundaries might rebuild this bond, balancing duty with fairness. Toss your thoughts, feelings, and fixes below—let’s stir some family wisdom!

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