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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:
dammit88 · 19/02/2026 17:17

You haven't failed as a parent. In some ways it's good that he feels he has a safety net in life. He knows he has you.

I completely understand your anger and disappointment though. It's because you want the best for him. It will be a life lesson to him in time im sure, when he wants to buy a house etc. Have you had a talk with him about it? Encouraging his independence whilst remaining a support for him is all you can do I think.

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:18

Dunnocantthinkofone · 19/02/2026 17:13

Your husband sounds like an enabling prat tbh

He is, his reaction was just “it’s okay son shit happens no need to apologise” those were his exact words.

OP posts:
Eudaimonia11 · 19/02/2026 17:18

Privileged rich kid graduates and pisses his money up the wall. He doesn’t value pr appreciate it. Why does it matter so much? He’s getting more money from inheritance in the future anyway. He’ll probably get a job and work here and there if and when he can be bothered.

schopenhauer · 19/02/2026 17:18

I think you should stop feeling that you have failed. He is an adult so made his own decisions. I would certainly start ensuring that you treat him as an adult and that if he does continue to live with you, he pays rent, share of bills and does his own cooking, cleaning, laundry etc. otherwise I would ask him to leave and I wouldn’t be giving him extra money either. However, sounds like your DH is a bit of an issue here.

FuzzyWolf · 19/02/2026 17:18

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.

You can’t dictate whether someone receives an inheritance or not. All you can do is not leave them anything in your own will.

HomeTheatreSystem · 19/02/2026 17:18

All you can do now is turf him out of the family home and tell him that he's had his year of fun and now needs to stand on his own 2 feet. He is smart enough to earn an income and make his own way in life. If you continue to offer him a soft landing, in no time you'll have a 30 year old at home, bored, entitled and self-destructive which will impose a terrible strain on your family and marriage.

KitsyWitsy · 19/02/2026 17:18

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

If it was part of a will then it wasn't your fault. If it was just their 'wishes' then maybe. The money I gave my sons was from their grandad but he gave everything to me to decide what to do with. I chose to give them 10k each but as I said, I didn't transfer the cash.

goz · 19/02/2026 17:19

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

Well you said part of the 50k he was gifted when he finished uni came from grandparents, so you must have wanted him to have it enough if you added money to it.

BlueJuniper94 · 19/02/2026 17:19

If you throw money like that at them I don't know what you expected!

cateringday · 19/02/2026 17:20

Wow. I’d be absolutely gutted. I actually travelled to all those places, took me four years and I spent a total of £4000

MySweetGeorgina · 19/02/2026 17:20

The kids have figured out there is money and there is more in the pipeline and that they do not have to work

money is just there

if’s a bit like the beckham kids

there is no incentive for them to work

not sure what the answer is. I woukd also find it frustrating 😬

MammaBear1 · 19/02/2026 17:20

I understand your disappointment in what you see as him being irresponsible. It was a gift though and for him to spend on what he chooses. He sounds like he’s had an amazing time and will have lots of
memories of his adventures.

If he’s due an inheritance, again it would be up to him how he spends it.

You also mention your daughter is spoilt. This is because you’ve spoilt her so if you don’t like it, then don’t do it anymore.

Nannyfannybanny · 19/02/2026 17:21

I also would be absolutely furious! Theres another thread on here, poster asking what would be reasonable for her dc to contribute towards the house running/bills, she works PT, but takes home £900. The vitriol was incredible, some replies even saying the government should prevent people from charging their poor offspring to live in the family home! I paid,my dks working ft paid.. I am of the belief it teaches responsibility,I have a friend, many years divorced her 40 year old son, moved back home after his divorce,blew about £30k, while earning sometimes £2k a week, plus a sideline DJ ING for which he gets cash in hand. Never paid her a penny. She's nearly 70, he has an adult DD, from one relationship,was married 10 years,2 DC from that, and doesn't support any of them..I threw my oldest DD out when she was 21, and taking the Micky , kept asking her to get a job. We're great mates, but she needed to learn. She rang me up a huge phone bill I couldn't pay and it was disconnected. Only landlines in those days. She borrowed money,dossed around all day, clubbing all night. Nowhere near to the extent of your son. My friend kept saying her 40 year old son,was just a young boy enjoying himself, then thankfully she took the rose coloured specs off.

Ablondiebutagoody · 19/02/2026 17:22

If money was being fire hosed at me, I would be dossing around too!

VickyEadieofThigh · 19/02/2026 17:22

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?

Indeed. Frankly OP - you and your husband are the ones who parented these spoilt people and made them feckless.

SunnyRedSnail · 19/02/2026 17:22

@YourOpenShaker I would be so disappointed if these were my kids. perhaps they became too reliant on handouts to appreciate paying their own way in life?

I would be considering that your own money goes to benefit those that would appreciate it rather than handing anything out to your kids.

I cannot believe your DH handed your DS £9k when he had burnt through £50k. That's just dumb!

You may have bright kids but they clearly haven't been taught much financial sense! Now would be a good time to start.

FlowerFairyDaisy · 19/02/2026 17:22

If you wanted him to use some of it as a deposit on a house, you should have held that amount back.

Telling him to move out and 'leave you alone' is vile.

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:23

To make it worse he is making money off TikTok lying to his followers about his travels, “working hard” when the money he got to start travelling was from his family.

He has over 100k and TikTok followers on instagram now, he’s being invited to stuff, awards, events etc it’s easy life for him and I’m just sick of it! He says he’s not made for “9-5” He just keeps getting rewarded. I don’t want my son to suffer but I’d like for him to know what it’s like to work hard for something and achieve it.

OP posts:
BerryTwister · 19/02/2026 17:24

I’d be furious too OP. But you’re clearly a very wealthy family, so it’s not the catastrophe that it would be for other people. Your main concern now is that your husband seems happy to flush money down the toilet too, so if I were you I would ensure we had separate finances. I wouldn’t want my hard earned cash going to someone who clearly has no idea how to manage money.

I never understand why people leave money to such young adults. My will says that my kids don’t get anything till they’re 25.

Marmalade71 · 19/02/2026 17:24

FuzzyWolf · 19/02/2026 17:18

You can’t dictate whether someone receives an inheritance or not. All you can do is not leave them anything in your own will.

Ok technically you’re right, but then I’d be making sure that the equivalent loss (the £50k plus whatever the remaining inheritance is) was taken out of his inheritance from my own estate

saltandvinegarpringles · 19/02/2026 17:24

I don’t want my son to suffer but I’d like for him to know what it’s like to work hard for something and achieve it.

You sound jealous.

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:25

cateringday · 19/02/2026 17:20

Wow. I’d be absolutely gutted. I actually travelled to all those places, took me four years and I spent a total of £4000

He has no concept of money anything he wanted he got

OP posts:
DinoLil · 19/02/2026 17:25

@YourOpenShaker I don't think you've failed as a parent. Your DS is an adult. A grown man. He knows what that money could have meant. So, he chose to travel, that's not a bad thing. Shame he didn't budget and that your DH bailed him out.

I agree with you, however. If he can travel the world then now is the time to leave home, earn money, learn its value. If he gets into debt, then that's a lesson like travelling is.

Give him a deadline, help him find somewhere and how to budget if need be. Help him pack, wave him off. He is not a child.

Dunnocantthinkofone · 19/02/2026 17:25

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:18

He is, his reaction was just “it’s okay son shit happens no need to apologise” those were his exact words.

Well this is where your real anger should be directed then,isn’t it?
A spoilt brat who’s only ever had to run to daddy for a bail out is hardly going to turn out as a responsible adult with money is he?

It’s not just your son’s fault. His age and the inheritance are a red herring though and don’t automatically mean squandering. Both my boys were gifted £50K by me and their dad at a similar age. Both saved it, added to it and used it for a deposit

KeepOffTheQuinoa · 19/02/2026 17:25

I think I would persuade the grandparents to withhold the further ££ until he needs a house deposit.

Young people are all different. Mine have been taken to the building society / bank every year to look at their accounts, looks at how to get best interest and told from a young age that savings is something they will never have if they spend and what it can mean for house deposit / driving lessons etc/ And have been v responsible. But you can't guarantee it.

I would be angry and would not want to support him out of my own money any further. You must have known he was spending more than he could earn at casual jobs while 'travelling'?

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