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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:
ByWarmShark · 19/02/2026 21:44

You just need to make sure the money dries up. He has potential but currently he has no motivation. The motivation for most of us is the need to survive. He needs to feel a bit of that. If he has a few months where he is a bit cold and a bit hungry in a shitty flatshare he'll soon realise spending £50k living it up wasn't a good idea and feel much more motivated to earn some cash. But he's got to find that out for himself. Hell, if I didn't have kids and a mortgage to think about and I was young and single and someone gave me £50k for free then I'd probably travel the world living it up too.

MynameisJune · 19/02/2026 21:45

I’m surprised he is making money and being invited places with only 100k followers. An old school friend of mine has 2million followers on TikTok and I know they barely earn anything or they would not still be working in the job they do.

He must have super high engagement and be doing a lot of sponsored posts to earn enough to live off. Although if he still lives at home your husband is likely funding most of his lifestyle and just not telling you again.

ByWarmShark · 19/02/2026 21:46

This is why so many millionaires make sure their kids don't just get everything handed to them on a plate. But you haven't failed as a parent, it sounds like he just needs to grow up a bit. You can't help what's happened, but you can change what happens in future.

chubbaa · 19/02/2026 21:46

What a sad sack your dh is

ChrisMartinsKisskam · 19/02/2026 21:47

Thechaseison71 · 19/02/2026 21:39

Can you legally keep hold of an adults money if they want it though?

If it’s in a will and specified as such and someone is named as a trustee
I was the executor / trustee of my late parents will

my son had similar clauses in his inheritance from my parents
but he did get 5k to go and spend on whatever he wanted
money for a car
pay of debts
and the rest as a house deposit

Mummyandherbaby · 19/02/2026 21:47

I am with your husband on this. Before I explain why , I would like to state that I am not on social media (MN is my guilty pleasure instead), and that I agree that being an F1 engineer is cooler than an influencer.

But ! - life is long in the sense that he could try the fun thing in his youth and go to the more boring conventional stuff later (he has a degree from Oxford after all).

Whereas, life is also short, and he seems to be enjoying himself and having experiences that most people will never have (travel, events, some fame etc).

And your husband is being your son's biggest fan, which is important for parent-child relationship. It looks like the son did nothing wrong and is just living his life how he wants to. Of course, you worry for him and wish he makes all the right decision for himself, but only time will tell what was right.

CurlyhairedAssassin · 19/02/2026 21:48

Goatsarebest · 19/02/2026 21:23

Yet again we having 'gifting' money with conditions. It's a control thing and so so common in families. I will give you money but unless you spend it according to my values or my expectations then you have wasted it. If you give money as a true gift you dont judge how it is spent.

That attitude is fine with small amounts. But with a large amount that could help someone to set themselves up for life and make them financially independent from their parents. Yes, it IS a waste if they spaff it ALL on travel or nights out.

borntooobesilly · 19/02/2026 21:53

HNRTFT but there is a reason why I was very careful when I inherited. I nominated a certain amount to my three children and they have had it when they would really benefit from it ! One to complete a masters, the other one for a house deposit and the third who sounds very similar to your son for when he really needs a leg up ie car for job in Oz,car repairs,rent deposit, flight home to see family etc !
Your son just sounds privileged and entitled and you need to ensure your other children don’t follow in his footsteps…lesson learned.

pocketpairs · 19/02/2026 21:54

You son didn't waste £59k..he travelled the world and created memories. If you wanted the money spent on a house, you should have stipulated that. Your child do sounds like extremely spoilt though, that's on you..just poor parenting.

TakeMe2Insanity · 19/02/2026 21:55

The best thing you can do now is take this “as a lesson learned” and “not make the same mistake twice”, “once bitten twice shy” etc, so next t8me you give large lump sums say it is a deposit for a home or show me how you intend to spend the money, or I’ll retain control of it (joint account) until you need it.

cramptramp · 19/02/2026 21:58

JonesTown · 19/02/2026 20:34

No- 16 year olds should spend their weekends doing some studying, exercise and seeing friends.

They already have a full time job- school. I certainly wouldn’t want to spend all week at work and then do the same again at weekends.

Lucky you that you’ve never been in the position to need 2 jobs. A part time student job isn’t going to be all weekend, and going to school isn’t the same as a full time job.

PinkyFlamingo · 19/02/2026 21:58

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:25

He has no concept of money anything he wanted he got

If I had family that just kept giving me large suns if money I wouldnt have any concept either

bert3400 · 19/02/2026 22:00

Thechaseison71 · 19/02/2026 21:39

Can you legally keep hold of an adults money if they want it though?

He doesn't want it, but we also delayed it being released untill closer to the exchange date. He knew what the money was intended for from the offset. He knows it's a once in lifetime opportunity to get his own house and especially after he's been burnt twice on the rental market. He's very mature but I still would not have handed him that much money to sit in his account

pastaish · 19/02/2026 22:03

JonesTown · 19/02/2026 20:34

No- 16 year olds should spend their weekends doing some studying, exercise and seeing friends.

They already have a full time job- school. I certainly wouldn’t want to spend all week at work and then do the same again at weekends.

I encouraged all my children to get jobs from the age of 16. Even just a few hours here and there. It's valuable to build work experience and history at that age. It helps them get employment later. They also have more financial freedom and choice.

When my children left school, they had the skills and experience and work history that made it easy for them to find jobs. Those who hadn't needed training, had no experience and weren't as attractive to employers. They also sometimes struggled to get any work at all.

trainboundfornowhere · 19/02/2026 22:04

At 18 I was gifted £2500 but that came with strings attached. Those strings meant that at 32 I could buy my flat without a mortgage. At 16 in 2000 (Scotland) I went to a further education college and I was given £15 a week and an annual bus pass. That £15 a week bought lunch at college and if I wanted anything else I had to earn it. My parents could have easily given me more (my dad retired at 47) but they wanted me to learn the value of things. Your son now needs to learn the real value of things which means that apart from essentials you and your DH now need to turn the tap off and help all your children and not just your eldest son find their feet. I can understand why you are angry OP but the only way to fix it is to turn off the tap and force your children to stand on their own two feet before you and husband are no longer their to help them.

Plmnki · 19/02/2026 22:05

Sorry, all your children sound like spoilt brats. They are in their twenties and you’ve only just noticed?

Damnloginpopup · 19/02/2026 22:08

I spent a lot more than that on a divorce.

Oxford. Travel...'foreign office' application 😉

NaiceBalonz · 19/02/2026 22:11

When he's 40, or 50 and married with kids he's likely going to look back on this as the best time of his life - and for good reason.

He's smart, he's got further inheritance due to him, there's absolutely nothing to worry about.

As a previous poster said you sound like you hate your children. I feel so sorry for them.

Holidaymodeon · 19/02/2026 22:15

Travelling the world and having fun is an amazing experience and I’d be delighted to be able to support my kids to do it.
we are a long time dead and if he settles down with a partner, maybe kids etc he may never get the opportunity again.

its a huge wide world out there, why on earth would you want to limit your adult sons experience and his management of his own money to do such generic things?

you are definitely being unreasonable here, are you jealous of his freedom or comparing him to your siblings’ children and feel embarrassed or something?

sure whoever died and left him that money would be delighted that he’s had such an exciting and well rounding experience

BigButtons · 19/02/2026 22:15

@YourOpenShaker I am with you all the way here- this generation are lazy arses

finbow · 19/02/2026 22:17

Sounds like his grandparents had accumulated quite the wealth to be able to gift that kind of amount to each grandchild (only in your family there’s three of them plus all the cousins).
I understand how you must feel but on one hand I am glad he has spread the money and supported businesses all around the world with it. He has all his experiences in return.

Starting from scratch will be healthy for him. He has the education and the right network to land a job straight away, doesn’t he. I wouldn’t worry.

pocketpairs · 19/02/2026 22:25

Think OP is a terrible parent, but not for the reasons she thinks. She clearly wants all her children to live their lives according to what she deems appropriate ("Oxford, Durham, 2 A*, good jobs", etc). When one deviates from her worldview, such as travelling, she "wants him to move out!"

Surely our primary objective should be to ensure that our DCs are happy, and if they are doing that, that's OK. They'll make mistakes, learn from them, and eventually find a place where they belong.

EasternStandard · 19/02/2026 22:26

BigButtons · 19/02/2026 22:15

@YourOpenShaker I am with you all the way here- this generation are lazy arses

Not all, maybe op’s. But it sounds like she’s just realising it’s the input of the parents too.

Greyblueeyes · 19/02/2026 22:30

Calendulaaria · 19/02/2026 19:03

I think it's your husband who is the issue. Your son is young and irresponsible but things will improve once he moves out and starts working etc.

I have to agree. Your husband is not helping. You are not on the same page with him and as long as he enables your son, this will continue. Can you try some type of couples counseling?

YourGreenCat · 19/02/2026 22:31

BerryTwister · 19/02/2026 20:38

@YourGreenCat travelling is a great thing to do, a wonderful experience, and educational too. It’s a really good thing for young people to do. But most of them work to save the money, manage to save about £2000, then off they go for few months of roughing it in exotic places. They might need the odd grand from their parents if they travel for longer. But OP’s son got through £48,000, and then had another £9000 of family money on top of that. Surely you don’t think that’s a healthy amount of money to spend on a bit of youth travelling?

He's not in debt, he hasn't hurt any one. What's the issue?

People on here sounds horribly jealous that someone had the luxury to enjoy themselves.

If he had put everything on credit card, even £5k on credit card, it would be unhealthy. No dependent, no children. He's the one who will have to save for his deposit.

Maybe he'll go for jobs involving a lot of travelling and relocation, and won't be interested in buying for years, who knows.

What I know is that young adults treated like little children by their parents don't tend to have a very happy relationship with them. Imagine having your mum throwing a tantrum everytime things are not done the way SHE has decided. Good luck to his future partner