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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:
LittleJustice · 19/02/2026 18:27

Wow that is so annoying I can absolutely feel your pain OP. My sons are getting £30,000 pounds each from their grandparents but it is only to be used towards a deposit for a house or flat. So far one son has purchased his own home and is paying his own mortgage and he's only 21 I'm really proud of him.

Soannoyingititchessobad · 19/02/2026 18:28

I mean you can’t beat yourself up about this too much - we’ve all made parenting mistakes so you’re not alone. I do think people are allowing their kids to grow up with too much entitlement and it takes away ambition. We have a decent amount of money and can afford to set our kids up with a good house deposit but we haven’t told them that and they both have jobs as teenager to save money into their junior isa because they know they need to get started on saving now. We don’t buy them lots of stuff and they have to budget for things themselves. I don’t have many things right as a parent but I’m not raising entitled gap yah kids

Araminta1003 · 19/02/2026 18:28

He is too old for you to interfere now. He is on his life journey and you need to let him work it out. You can explain calmly, but in any event, his engineering skills, bright brain and online presence may come together and form something special.
One of the YAs in our wider family has created their own tech business and been approached to sell it for millions! He is refusing to sell it, despite it likely being out of date soon and needing upscaling. Everyone has tried to reason with him, including my own DC1, to no avail. So he is likely to be wasting paper millions needlessly. Post 21, they just have to make their own choices. The world has changed and we do not necessarily understand their lot anyway.

FloralAmber · 19/02/2026 18:28

If all of your children are spoilt, have zero ambitions and don’t understand the value of money then you and your husband messed up. My siblings and I would’ve used that money on a house deposit even when we were in our early 20s. If they’re ever skint then they can work for their money. Don’t give them anymore.

mindutopia · 19/02/2026 18:29

I don’t think money spent travelling in your 20s is necessarily money poorly spent. It’s a great life experience and not something he’ll be able to do in 10/20 years when he has a mortgage and kids. I probably spent a good bit (not £50k!) travelling and living abroad and partying in my 20s. It was great. I learnt a lot from that time in my life and I met Dh working abroad. That said, i wouldn’t gift my dc £50k for anything other than a house deposit. I would financially support them to travel and to look for work, but there would be no blank cheques.

Wingingit73 · 19/02/2026 18:29

You gave it to him.its his to spend. Maybe you should've waited. But its his money. He's young. He's had an amazing time. You haven't lost anything or anyone

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 19/02/2026 18:29

Honestly, reading this thread, you can totally see how the Boris Johnsons of this world are made.

Did he spaff £60k up the wall? Ah, he's a young man.

Did he lie about it repeatedly? Well it's your fault he lied, because he knew you might express disappointment. You can't expect him to handle that!

Did he blow off two good jobs that lots of people would kill to get? Well, there's always more where that came from.

Etc.....

BillieWiper · 19/02/2026 18:30

Well it's gone now. He spent it on travelling which isn't a complete waste. It was probably great fun.

You don't need to fund his life, he's an adult. If he's no job then he goes on UC. You shouldn't be paying for his food or cooking or cleaning for him. Treat him like the adult he is.

If you need the money and he won't pay board then tell him to leave and get a lodger in his room. But you'll need to write a letter to the council making him homeless otherwise they won't help him.

JLou08 · 19/02/2026 18:30

Sounds more like your DHs doing than yours. Sending him 9k when he'd already spent 50k is sending a terrible message. I'd tell DH you need to stop helping him completely, not a penny. He needs to get a job and learn some responsibility and you need to send the message to the younger 2 that it is not acceptable.

Substance · 19/02/2026 18:30

LittleJustice · 19/02/2026 18:27

Wow that is so annoying I can absolutely feel your pain OP. My sons are getting £30,000 pounds each from their grandparents but it is only to be used towards a deposit for a house or flat. So far one son has purchased his own home and is paying his own mortgage and he's only 21 I'm really proud of him.

This^
You cannot hand huge amounts of money to 21 year olds with no strings attached. Sums of this kind must be made available ONLY for a deposit on a home or for further education.

Strngerthings · 19/02/2026 18:30

@YourOpenShaker its not your fault sometimes humans are the way they are and no amout of training or advice can make or improve some people, i think sometimes its just in your genetics and then other influences that shape you etc

Winter2020 · 19/02/2026 18:31

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:14

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

This is sad. You haven't failed as a parent. Given the choice it would have been wise to save the money for when your son was buying a property, or if he wanted to travel give him 5k of it to blow, but perhaps you didn't have this choice?

If your son's Grandparents wanted him to have this money and gave it to all the Grandchildren then that's beyond your control. Some young people are more frugal and savvy than others. It was given to him and then his to blow. Perhaps he will live to regret blowing the money when he needs a house deposit - perhaps he won't if he earns good money from social media or whatever else.

I do think you are being unreasonable extrapolating your feeling to your other kids. They aren't going to pass a law degree at Durham or get straight As at A level by being total wasters. You should be very proud of them.

Your son that went travelling hasn't killed anybody. He doesn't have a terrible addiction as far as we know, he has just dropped out of the rat race for a while. He might drop back in when he wants something, or might do ok with a slightly alternative life.

I wouldn't kick him out personally. You love him and it sounds like your husband will bank roll his flat if he moves out. I would just encourage him that if he wants to move out, go on holiday etc then he needs to earn money. I would also consider letting the girlfriend move in. She sounds like a grafter and a good influence.

Squirrelchops1 · 19/02/2026 18:32

Are you going to give him more money in the future when he comes, cap in hand for a house deposit?

Truetoself · 19/02/2026 18:33

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Jasonandtheargonauts · 19/02/2026 18:33

You sound jealous of him OP. Jealous of how life has turned out for him, jealous that he's got mates who also want to move out and live with him. Jealous of his social media success, jealous of any luck that befalls him.

Who cares that his social media is built on lies? Most social media is, even personal accounts. It's his job. Most jobs are built on lies right from the first interview. Nobody, when asked why they want to work for the company or in that industry, answers "because I have bills to pay, want to own a house and go on holidays".

Terrribletwos · 19/02/2026 18:34

Squirrelchops1 · 19/02/2026 18:32

Are you going to give him more money in the future when he comes, cap in hand for a house deposit?

I believe, from ops posts, he's making a handsome living from TikTok.

PinterandPirandello · 19/02/2026 18:34

Sounds like he has loads of money from his ‘job’ and even more inheritance and parental money. Plus he’s an Oxford engineering grad. Lots of privilege. I’d say ‘you’re on your own’ now and discuss not giving him any more funds with your husband. He needs to stand on his own two feet.

hattie43 · 19/02/2026 18:35

Something has gone wrong if all 3 are grifters . What a waste , but they are still young and may turn it around. To me though they’ve just looked at the family financial set up and just thought fuck it I’ll get my inheritances and drift through life . They don’t need to graft when family money is coming their way .

Mischance · 19/02/2026 18:35

I think you should not compare him to his cousin.

Does he live with you?

He IS making a living - just not in the way you imagined.

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 18:36

Jasonandtheargonauts · 19/02/2026 18:33

You sound jealous of him OP. Jealous of how life has turned out for him, jealous that he's got mates who also want to move out and live with him. Jealous of his social media success, jealous of any luck that befalls him.

Who cares that his social media is built on lies? Most social media is, even personal accounts. It's his job. Most jobs are built on lies right from the first interview. Nobody, when asked why they want to work for the company or in that industry, answers "because I have bills to pay, want to own a house and go on holidays".

Jealous of my own son? I want the best for him.

I am upset that I have failed as a mother to be honest most of his mistakes trace back to his father and I so jealous no, upset that I have failed yes

OP posts:
YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 18:37

Squirrelchops1 · 19/02/2026 18:32

Are you going to give him more money in the future when he comes, cap in hand for a house deposit?

No

OP posts:
blooooooor · 19/02/2026 18:37

You can’t turn back time and change what happened. He had the money, and he spent it all exactly how he wanted. Now he’s back home and needs to face a reality check. You need to stop the credit line at the bank of Mom and Dad…

I’m sure, years from now, he’ll look back and regret spending every last penny so recklessly. 🤷🏼‍♀️ Sometimes, the best lessons come from learning from your own choices.

GingerBeverage · 19/02/2026 18:38

So your husband has control because he can turn on the money taps whenever needed, and says yes to anything, including a partner moving into your house.

Has he always used money to control people and elicit loyalty and love? Does he do
it to you too?

SunSparkle · 19/02/2026 18:38

Do you and your husband come from different backgrounds in regards to wealth?

was there a mandate that the grandkids have to be given the money at a certain age? does it have to be given in one lump sum?

if you have the means to be chucking £9k at your son at short notice it’s clear you have a v privileged lifestyle. What money education do the kids have? Have they been given a lot for nothing throughout their teen years?

BoleynMemories13 · 19/02/2026 18:38

You keep talking of failing as a parent but you seem to keep making the same mistakes rather than learning from them. You are giving everything to your kids on a plate.

The need to learn to stand on their own two feet. They won't do that if you keep throwing money at them and trying to organise work for them etc. That's your only failure, that you keep doing it. I understand it comes from a place of love but you're really not helping your children to become responsible adults. They'll learn responsibility by having to figure life out for themselves. You really need to take a step back now.