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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Our son has spent £48k in a space of 18 months ?? This was a gift for him to save. Husband says it’s fine he’s young but I am so pissed off I’ve told him to move out in a month go find a place with his idle friends

727 replies

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:05

As the title suggests, I’m really struggling with this.

In 2023, after our eldest son graduated from Oxford with an engineering degree and secured a very good job, we gifted him £50,000. He turns 25 this year. Part of that money came from his grandparents and it was always intended for him. We were incredibly proud of everything he had achieved.

Not long after starting work, he decided to quit his job as he couldn’t be bothered aha wanted to travel. He said he was young and wanted to experience life. We asked what his plan was and he told us he was going to Australia to travel and work. We accepted that.
It turns out he did not work at all. He travelled, drank, spent freely, not just in Australia but across Asia as well. When he came back, he told us he was doing online tutoring. We later discovered he had quit that too. Then he went to South America and carried on travelling. I had assumed he had at least been saving some of the money we gave him, but he has now spent the entire £50,000.

I am absolutely furious. I do not think I have ever been this angry or disappointed. It is not just the money. It is the lying, the lack of responsibility and what feels like a complete disregard for how privileged he is.
His cousins were given similar amounts and have used it wisely. One, who is younger than him, has already put down a deposit on a house. I know comparison is not always helpful, but it is hard not to notice the contrast we have failed as parents.

My husband says I need to calm down, that he is young and this is what young people sometimes do. He asks what we expected. Maybe there is some truth in that. But I still thought he would show some maturity, or at least some awareness of the opportunity he had been given.

There is further inheritance from his grandparents due to come to him in the future and right now I do not even want him to have it. He seems to have no real concept of money or how fortunate he is. He says he does not want a proper job and seems content drifting along. His uncle, who is an art dealer and runs auctions, has involved him a little in that world. But this is a bright, capable young man who once worked incredibly hard and now it feels like he is doing very little with his potential and will never really suffer consequences because there’s always someone there to help him.

Found out that he ran out of money when he was in South America and wanted to go travel around America too last summer so his father , my husband sent him 9k and told him to not spend it all he did and he was asking him to buy his flight tickets too to come back home. Some kids don’t even get to see that type of money!!!

I am just so deeply disappointed and unsure what to do next.

I have said he needs to move out find a place with his friends and leave us alone!! My husband thinks that’s selfish he’s still our son and has now been looking at flats for him, two of his friends are looking at flats/house shares around London too and yet again he is saved, he just always seems to get lucky. I’m sick of it.

My daughter too spoilt rotten. Is in her final year at Durham very smart studying law but ever so spoilt spoilt spoilt has no ambitions no goals just existing. Our other son another one that wants to just “chill” he’s doing his alevels this year he’s very bright , maths physics economics and predicted 2A*s and an A he will achieve that or even over achieve but no ambition at all.

It is our faint as parents I can’t even blame anyone else just wanted to vent

OP posts:
Doseofreality · 19/02/2026 17:08

Well they do say you are a product of your environment and upbringing.

He’s an adult, he’s not answerable to you. It was his money.

Pancakesbythedozen · 19/02/2026 17:08

It was a gift. No strings on a gift.
My mate scrimpted and saved 6k in a bank account for her ds. He drank its away in less than 10 months...
My respect for him fell tbh.
Yanbu to feel disappointed but it was his money to burn.

Hoppinggreen · 19/02/2026 17:08

Was the money a true gift or did it come with conditions?
He has wasted it but it was his to waste, I wouldn't be at all cross in your situation.
I WOULD be cross with my H who sent him money without telling me though

goz · 19/02/2026 17:09

I mean you and your DH sound just as stupid as him. Why would you randomly gift a 23 year old 50k?
Very few young people do well and are still motivated when they have very easy access to substantial sums of money.
It was your job as a parent to ensure your child was mature enough for this money, you should have waited until he was motivated enough himself to buy a property if you were going to be furious about it being spaffed up the wall.
It’s done now though.

HoppityBun · 19/02/2026 17:10

I really don’t think that it is fair to blame your children for the fact that their parents have spoilt them.

More money than sense, yes. But what made them those people?

JustMyView13 · 19/02/2026 17:10

You gifted him the money. You can’t then control or dictate how he spends it. I’m sure he’s made some incredible memories, and life is short. At least he didn’t gamble it.
I suspect he lied because he knew how you’d react.
As for the £9k DH sent him, did he not think to ask where the original balance went? That’s on him. Not sure why spending his money travelling should be worthy of kicking him out. Sure, he needs to get a job and fund his lifestyle & repay his debt, but not sure how making him homeless helps with that.

Shadeflower · 19/02/2026 17:10

£50k landing in your lap at 21yo (?) was never going to teach financial responsibility....

Notdanishsusan · 19/02/2026 17:11

I can see why it’s disappointing but I do think extensive travel is probably a good use of it if it was going to be spent rather than put into a house deposit.

TheWildZebra · 19/02/2026 17:11

You were unreasonable to have given a young man that much money with no strings attached.

SargeMarge · 19/02/2026 17:11

Well, if all of your kids have absolutely no regard for money or setting up a good life then yes, you’ve spoilt them and now they’re rotten.

Maybe instead of kicking them out one after the other you do some parenting. Sit down with him and talk about the life he wants, the style of life, the things he’d like to have and then look at costs and what he can get for doing doss work and what he could get if he had his degree. But to sound a bit too late. They’ve had too much access to money that they take it as a given and it’s going to take the cold sharp reality of living without the bank of mum and dad before they grow up.

INX · 19/02/2026 17:11

Shadeflower · 19/02/2026 17:10

£50k landing in your lap at 21yo (?) was never going to teach financial responsibility....

Exactly my thoughts.

MunterJobHunter · 19/02/2026 17:12

YABU
Surely once the money has ran out he has to return to working like the rest of us? I would never begrudge someone with the funds available, the opportunity to travel, see the world and party. Once boring adult responsibilities kick in that opportunity becomes much harder.
if he’s expecting to come home and sponge off you without contributing something then he needs to be told.

cestlavielife · 19/02/2026 17:12

You gave him the money.
If you wanted it to be for a house deposit you should have kept it and said so. He clearly is not at an age early 20s to settle down. Why did you think he was?
No reason to chuck him out that just makes you look petty

Dunnocantthinkofone · 19/02/2026 17:13

Your husband sounds like an enabling prat tbh

Maraudingmarauders · 19/02/2026 17:14

I don’t believe travel is wasted money. Your title suggested he had spent it lying around at home and ordering just eat. What a wonderful things to e able to do, travel around the world with no timelines and deadlines. Just meeting people and experiencing different cultures. Once you but a house, you’re tied in a way to a particular type of life with responsibilities and a mortgage to pay. If he’s got more money coming in the future then perfect, he can use that for a deposit or start a business, or who knows - he might continue travelling. He’ll be a rich person for it.

FuzzyWolf · 19/02/2026 17:14

He’s an adult spending what sounds to have been largely an inheritance from someone else. You can’t control what others spend their money on or determine what is and what is not acceptable.

susiedaisy1912 · 19/02/2026 17:14

Good grief why would you just hand over that sort of money to a young person. I’m 56 years old and even I’d have a hard time being sensible with a lump sum like that.

SargeMarge · 19/02/2026 17:14

MunterJobHunter · 19/02/2026 17:12

YABU
Surely once the money has ran out he has to return to working like the rest of us? I would never begrudge someone with the funds available, the opportunity to travel, see the world and party. Once boring adult responsibilities kick in that opportunity becomes much harder.
if he’s expecting to come home and sponge off you without contributing something then he needs to be told.

But he didn’t have to go back to the real world because dad sent more money, then more again for plane tickets. Why would he think of being serious when his partner just throw more thousands at him?

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:14

goz · 19/02/2026 17:09

I mean you and your DH sound just as stupid as him. Why would you randomly gift a 23 year old 50k?
Very few young people do well and are still motivated when they have very easy access to substantial sums of money.
It was your job as a parent to ensure your child was mature enough for this money, you should have waited until he was motivated enough himself to buy a property if you were going to be furious about it being spaffed up the wall.
It’s done now though.

His grandparents wanted them to have. All grandkids got the same exact amount. I didn’t want it to happen but not my choice really.

I know I have failed as a parent

OP posts:
Fluffyholeysocks · 19/02/2026 17:15

What is done is done. He's spent it. Now it's time to learn what having no money means. Don't give him any more. He has to learn to pay his way.
I too would be disappointed if my DS blew that sort of money. But why your DH gave him £9k more but said don't spend it all is beyond me.

Marmalade71 · 19/02/2026 17:15

I’d be appalled too OP. I don’t care if it was a gift, that kind of profligacy with family money would take away all my respect for him. He’s had great privilege and has thrown it back in your faces.
That’s a definite no more inheritance until you’ve shown some maturity situation.
I’m not sure I’d kick him out, but I would absolutely be expecting him to contribute financially to the household.

KitsyWitsy · 19/02/2026 17:15

Crazy. I gave my sons 10k each last year. But not directly. It's my money and I didn't want it wasted. One son bought a piano and the other got a private, much needed operation. I just paid the bills directly and gave them anything left over.

If I were you, I'd have told him he has 50k towards a house when the time comes or for anything important and that was it. I wouldn't have transferred that amount to a young man. But it's done now. What a bloody waste.

Peonies12 · 19/02/2026 17:16

you Gave it to him that was so stupid, sorry but it was. You should have put it in a high interest savings for when he was ready to buy a property. You can’t punish him for spending money he was given freely

Needthesunnow · 19/02/2026 17:17

God I would be annoyed too. It’s entitled behaviour. I would be more annoyed at my husband bailing him out with the £9k and looking for flats for him. Has your husband historically stepped in? I have this issue to a lesser degree, husband does too much for the kids IMO.

He now needs to live with with consequences. I’d be like “OK, the money is gone now, it was your choice. I don’t agree with how you spent it but it’s not my money” and then DO NOT BAIL HIM OUT! He needs to sit with what he’s done.

My kids are due to inherit a 7 figure sum and this chills me!

SargeMarge · 19/02/2026 17:17

@YourOpenShaker
Was the extra £9k plus plane tickets given as a loan from your husband? With an agreed repayment plan? Or was it a gift? Do his sing kings each get an extra £9k if you’re just giving it to him and calling it quits?