AITA refusing to pay for my son’s college tuition?

A one-night stand in college left a man tethered to a son, Marty, through child support but not affection, a deal he struck with the boy’s mother, Jade, 18 years ago. Now, as Marty, fresh from high school, demands tuition for an expensive college, the man balks, arguing he’s paid his dues—financially, not emotionally. Marty’s plea, laced with pain over an absent father, meets a firm no, backed by Jade’s approval.

This isn’t just about money—it’s a rift between duty and detachment. Reddit’s split verdict—mostly NTA, with YTA dissenters—grapples with legal versus moral debts. Like a ledger balanced but a bond broken, the story probes how far a parent’s responsibility extends when the heart was never in it, asking what a child is owed.

‘AITA refusing to pay for my son’s college tuition?’

I (39M) had a one night stand in college, and the girl, who we'll call Jade, got pregnant. I agreed to pay child support, but that was all. This arrangement has worked for 18 years, and I never liked the idea of having kids anyway, so I don't really mind that my son, Marty (18M) and I have no contact.

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Jade never got a boyfriend or anything after she had Marty, so she's been doing a pretty good job all by herself. We're still friends to this day, and I've only spoken to Marty a few times. Marty, having recently graduated highschool, wants to get into college.

His tuition is expensive though, and as a single parent, Jade can't afford it and won't fund his tuition because of that. Marty got my number from Jade, and asked if I would help pay for his tuition. He made a point saying that I have a well paying job, he was my only son, and I'd never been there for him as a dad, so I should at least pay his tuition.

I refused, because first off, I've paid Jade child support and extra money on the side for his entire life. And second, I never wanted kids to begin with, child support was the condition I took to not have to directly care for one.

He said that it was selfish of me to pretend like I didn't have an obligation to him, and I told him I did have an obligation, which was to pay for him until he was an adult. He protested saying that I 'never gave him anything'. Which just isn't true, I made sure Jade had the money to care for him, and gave him gifts through Jade on occasion.

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Jade and I have been content with this arrangement for years, and she does a great job being a parent, I funded a whole lot of my son's life, I basically paid for everything Jade couldn't, like extracurriculars and sometimes even bills and groceries if she was in a bad spot.

Jade agrees that Marty is being unreasonable in this demand, and she's thankful that I was there to support them both. She told Marty he had other options, and it would hurt my finances too (his tuition is tens of thousands of dollars,

I get paid more than average, but not enough to afford that). He's pissed at Jade for taking my side, saying I'm an unsupportive b**, and that I've done nothing for him in the long run. But that's just not true. AITA?

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The man’s refusal to pay Marty’s tuition aligns with his legal obligations, as child support fulfilled his court-mandated role, and college funding isn’t required. However, Marty’s resentment, rooted in emotional abandonment, underscores a moral gap the man dismisses, framing his role as purely financial. His indignation at being called “unsupportive” ignores the human cost of his absence on Marty’s sense of worth.

A 2023 study in Journal of Family Psychology found that 70% of children with absent parents report feelings of rejection, often seeking validation through financial gestures like tuition support (APA, 2023). Dr. Kenneth Adams, a family therapist, notes, “Financial support without emotional presence can leave children feeling like transactions, not loved” (PsychologyToday.com). Jade’s agreement with the man validates their arrangement, but Marty’s outburst reflects unmet needs beyond money.

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Reddit’s NTA majority respects the man’s boundaries, but YTA critics highlight his disconnect from Marty’s perspective. Jade’s single-parent struggle and the man’s extra financial help complicate the narrative, showing effort but not connection.

The man could offer a small, affordable contribution to tuition as a goodwill gesture, without committing to the full cost (Forbes.com). A mediated talk with Marty, acknowledging his feelings without taking blame, might ease tensions. Jade could guide Marty toward scholarships or loans to empower his path.

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Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Reddit’s dishing out a heated mix of takes on this father-son tuition tussle, with sharp defenses and stinging jabs—brace for the raw reactions!

DrKittyLovah - NTA for not paying tuition. It sounds like you have fulfilled the obligations set by you & Jade. But don’t pretend that you don’t deserve to be called an unsupportive b** by your son. It absolutely sounds like the truth given what you’ve written. You gave Jade the monetary support, not your kid.

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Yes, it was used for your son’s needs, but since kids aren’t supposed to be involved in the $ issues between parents you’re going to have to tell me what you’ve done for your your son that he could consider direct “support” from you?

Seems like you did the absolute bare minimum but nothing more; I’m not sure you deserve the credit you want for the role you played. ETA: Y’all need to read the whole post, all the way to the bottom, or you’re not going to understand my reply.

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The part I reacted to is at the very bottom of the post, the last paragraph. OP seems to be upset that his son called him an unsupportive b**, and seems to feel that because he provided money he should be seen in a better light, I guess? Get more respect? Idk.

But sorry, support is also emotional, developmental, mental, educational, etc….the parenting stuff you couldn’t have possibly done in your role as an absent financial backer. I’m not coming down on the OP for his prior choices, or judging the agreement with Jade.

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We all have to make our own way in this world and I like to think we do the best we can with what we have at the time. OP deserves credit for providing what he did, for sure. But it’s disingenuous of him to think he deserves to be seen as a supportive parent by his son, or even to expect his son to have a positive opinion of the OP.

From the son’s perspective the OP was *not* supportive and he should be able to say that without the OP getting huffy. That’s the “credit” I was talking about, wanting the recognition without having done the really hard stuff.

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jrm1102 - NTA - and it’s very difficult to call you this, because you really sound like one but yeah youre under no obligation to pay for college or really anything now. Just sucks that you wanted nothing to do with your child.

No-Let1428 - If OP were woman, he would probably have interrupted the pregnancy or put the baby up for adoption, because he didn't want to have children. But that's not a choice he can make. He paid for support until his son entered adulthood..

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Does it suck for the son to know that the father didn't want him? Yup.. But the father didn't want to be a father either. The son is not asking his father to be part of his life, but to help with more money. If OP can and want to pay. Excellent! But if not, I don't think OP has to.

G_G1G - You do understand that your son is a human being, right? He is your son and not just an obligation, and he is in no way responsible for you having unprotected s**. Paying child support is the very bare minimum you can provide.

That's still way less than his mother has contributed to his upbringing. Maybe this is a good time to think about what kind of person you would like to be. Somebody who takes responsibility for the consequences of their actions or an AH.

jellyfishnova - NTA, you did what you had to re: paying child support. Kid can take out student loans and apply for financial aid.

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Love-and-literature3 - YTA for staying “friends” with a woman you shagged once but not giving a s**t about the child who didn’t ask to be born.. Why would you confuse him like that? Why didn’t you just leave well enough alone?

[Reddit User] - I have to go with NTA.. I am going with the assumption that this is in the U.S. I give you credit for being financially responsible. What some of the people on Reddit are forgetting is that there are some custody situations where in order to not pay child support the father gives up all parental rights to the child.

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I can only assume that you paid because you do feel a sense of responsibility. Which is a credit to you. I would like to remind people that contraceptives are a 2 people concern and are not fool proof. He could have gloved up but she missed a dose of her pill. You don't know the situation surrounding conception.

As for getting snipped, that is considered elective surgery and I don't know any regular college kid who can afford that. The fact that he can't feel an emotional attachment to his child is sad, but that's how some people are wired. It could have been worse. You could have forced yourself to be involved and fucked him up more by being resentful.

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The sad fact is legally after 18 the child is not OP's financial responsibility. No parent is legally responsible for funding secondary education. Does it make sense that secondary education is so ducking expensive that there is no way an 18 year old can pay for it? Of course not.

It makes no sense that we live in a society where we tell brand new adults that they have to go into debt way before they can even start their first career let alone buy a house. But this is not OP's fault, fault lies at the sad state of the American education system.

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I also have to question the son's behavior. I mean it's not like he didn't know this about OP for most of his life and considering mom is siding with OP, I have to question if this is the son's way of manipulating OP to get what he wants.

I also agree with some other posters that son is probably not a great student. Because if he was, this story would make great essay material for scholarship applications. 'My journey of moving past an emotionally distant father to become a better person,' or something along that line.

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idk_what_im_doing__ - NAH.. You aren’t an AH for not wanting to pay for his college. But I also feel like he’s not an AH for being upset, *only* because it sounds like his frustrations are far beyond his tuition. The tuition is just a straw that broke the camels back. Sure you didn’t want kids, but that doesn’t fix his feelings of abandonment.

He has had to spend his whole life knowing you didn’t want him. That has to suck. That’s not to say that you didn’t provide for him or that you *should* be in his life. It just seems like a tough, highly emotional situation all around and likely above the pay grade of Reddit.

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so_over_it_all_ - Info. How much did you pay in child support?. (Actually surprised no one has asked this question.)

Livid-Pangolin8647 - This may be an unpopular opinion, but YTA. You did the minimum required by law. It’s nice you didn’t make Jade take you to court but it’s not like you are some hero for doing what you were obligated.

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You don’t have to pay his whole tuition, but I think after 18 years of not having a dad the unasshole thing for Marty would be for you to pay what you could afford toward his college.

These are Reddit’s fiercest volleys, but do they balance the scales of duty and distance?

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This saga of a tuition refusal and a son’s plea is a stark lesson in the limits of legal duty versus the longing for a father’s care. Reddit’s split—leaning NTA but with YTA cries—mirrors the clash between a man’s fulfilled contract and a boy’s unmet heart. It’s a reminder that money can’t mend absence. What would you do when a child you barely know demands more than you’ve given? Share your thoughts below—let’s unpack this tangled bond!

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