AITA for Refusing to Lend My Friend Money After She Never Paid Me Back?

A 29-year-old woman refuses to lend her chronically broke friend another $300 after a $500 loan she made six months earlier has not been repaid. The friend, in desperate need of a new phone, explodes with accusations of selfishness and betrayal, insisting that moral support will erase the financial debt. Complicating matters is the onslaught of mutual friends who demand trust and generosity despite the borrower’s lack of effort.

This standoff exposes the raw tension between loyalty and responsibility in adult friendships. One side sees money as a verifiable bond, the other as a gift between loved ones. As reminders are ignored and excuses pile up, the lender draws the line—only to face a storm of guilt and social pressure.

‘AITA for Refusing to Lend My Friend Money After She Never Paid Me Back?’

The friendship began with small favors, but one major loan changed everything.

So I (29F) have this friend, "Lisa" (28F), who’s always been kinda bad with money. We've been close since college, so when she asked for a couple small loans over...

But about six months ago, she had this huge issue with her car breaking down, and then she couldn’t pay rent. She asked if I could lend her $500 to...

Casual reminders yielded endless delays, turning patience into resignation.

I didn’t pressure her or anything, but fast forward to now and guess what? Still not a dime back. I’ve reminded her a couple times casually,

and each time she’s like “Oh, I’m just so broke this month, next month for sure,” or “I’ll get you when I get paid.” But like... it’s been six months....

A fresh request for $300 triggered a firm no—and a friendship meltdown.

Then, out of nowhere last week, she asks if she can borrow another $300 because her phone broke and she needs a new one. I straight up told her I...

She got super defensive and was like, “I thought we were friends? Why are you acting like this? I’m obviously going to pay you back, I just need more time.”...

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That’s when she totally lost it. She said I was being selfish, and that I was using the money to make her feel bad and act like I’m "better than...

She then brought up how she’s always been there for me emotionally when I needed someone, like that somehow cancels out the money she owes me. Now, some of our...

They think I’m overreacting about the $500 and that if I really trusted her as a friend, I wouldn’t make it a big deal. But like, I’ve already helped her...

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It’s not even the money at this point, it’s about being taken advantage of. So, AITA for refusing to loan her more money? Or am I being too harsh about...

Lending money to friends immediately changes the power dynamics and tests character under pressure. The borrower’s repeated excuses reveal a pattern of avoidance, while the lender refuses to protect both finances and self-esteem. Mutual friends who side with the debtor ignore the basic rule: unpaid debts destroy trust.

Counterarguments argue that money is secondary to emotional history, that true friendship will make up for losses. However, this view allows parasitism and punishes generosity. The lender is not withholding assistance—she is imposing consequences for broken promises.

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Socially, chronic debtors exploit kindness, relying on guilt to secure endless bailouts. “Unpaid loans between friends are not about money; they are about respect in the relationship,” financial therapist Amanda Clayman said in a 2023 interview with CNBC. “When repayments stop, things become transactional—and one-sided.”

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Most users back the poster, urging her to hold the line and expose the mooch.

BoopityGoopity − I mean, if they think you’re overreacting, they can just give her the $300. And pay you back for the $500. NTA

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PeriodicAnxiety − seems to me those mutual friends should just lend her the money. NTA.

Beerded-1 − Interesting that none of those friends on her side are chipping in on her new phone. NTA and you need better friends

Someone_RandomName − She will never pay you back. NTA

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big_bear_760 − F__k THAT. Being friends doesn’t automatically wipe out a debt because they were there for you at some point.

NTA whatsoever, as a matter of fact I’d suggest telling the friends that are calling you an AH to step up to the plate and cover her monetary needs and/or...

A couple of voices push for nuance, suggesting structured repayment or distance.

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trustbrown − NTA If your mutual friends want to lend money, let them. You are in the hole $500. Taking it to $800 makes no sense. I love it when...

kmflushing − I mean, you'd be stupid to fall for that scam twice, wouldn't you? Dont be stupid. Tell the flying monkeys that you're going to let her know they're...

Lighthearted jabs cut the tension without cruelty.

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Chaoticgood790 − “Since you think it’s no big deal I’ll let Lisa know that she can get the money from you! ”

[Reddit User] − that if I really trusted her as a friend, I wouldn’t make it a big deal. Tell them you realized you can't trust her because she has...

Miss_Melody_Pond − Haha typical parasite. Accepts no responsibility for her actions. Don’t give the leach another cent and honestly I’d be severing ties. Take her to small claims and consider...

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The poster’s stand transforms a $500 lesson into a boundary that may save the friendship—or end it. Community consensus labels the borrower unreliable and the guilting friends hypocritical, reinforcing that trust requires action, not promises.

Have you ever loaned money to a friend who ghosted repayment—how did you handle the fallout? When mutual friends defend the deadbeat, do you call their bluff or quietly exit the group?

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