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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:
Gnomer · 19/02/2026 17:26

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:25

He has no concept of money anything he wanted he got

Was that how his life was when he was growing up?

MauriceTheMussel · 19/02/2026 17:26

Fuck me. Chill out.

Your kids are their own people, not people to represent and please you.

He got an Oxbridge degree. Spent a GIFT experiencing the world. Good for him.

I was an academic over achiever and went straight to work in the City. I didn’t travel or have a heyday and it’s a bitter disappointment to me. Let him live HIS life.

StripedMug · 19/02/2026 17:26

What was said about the money when you gave it to him? If you wanted it to be used for a specific purpose that should have been clear (or even better, if it was meant for a house deposit, you should have told him that you were holding the money for him for that purpose and would give it to him at the appropriate time). I disagree with PP that you can only give money without conditions or not at all- it's perfectly reasonable to be willing to give it for some purposes but not others, and the other person can choose to accept it or not- but you have to be completely clear about this upfront.

Sounds like his dad isn't helping. Once he ran out it was reasonable to lend him the fare home but I wouldn't have done more than that.

I don't see what kicking him out achieves now. Sounds to me as if you and your husband need to agree some ground rules, what you are willing to pay for and what you aren't, and communicate this clearly. So far it's all mixed messages and confusion and the money keeps coming which undermines anything you might say.

faithfultoGeorgeMichael · 19/02/2026 17:26

Why did you give him £50k with no strings attached? Was it for a property? To pay off loans? I’m baffled tbh, he was given that money at the worst possible time.

saltandvinegarpringles · 19/02/2026 17:26

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:25

He has no concept of money anything he wanted he got

And whose fault is that?

RosesAndHellebores · 19/02/2026 17:26

@YourOpenShaker have you and your parents not heard of Trusts, tying up the money until 25/30? Meanwhile the DC have to work if they want anything, notwithstanding student fees and accommodation were paid. Despite that, DS is far more careful than DD but she at least just spends everything she earns

TBF my dad gave me £6k in 1981. It went towards a flat deposit.

You are where you are, hopefully he has learnt a hard lesson and will knuckle down and work and save. I'd not give him a penny more.

goz · 19/02/2026 17:26

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.

In what way is it jealous to want your adult child to be able to stand on their own two feet?
It sounds like when this machine doesn’t have his parents around to bail him out all the time he won’t be able to cope with life.

movinghomeadvice · 19/02/2026 17:26

Your mistake was just giving him the money to spend as he wished. I’ve been given lots of money by my parents as an adult, but always on the condition that it was for a particular purpose. E.g. 10k but only to be spent on my wedding, 50k but only to be spent on a house deposit. I’m very responsible and mature, but even I would have struggled with 50k no-strings-attached at age 23.

Now you’ve seen that he’s irresponsible with money, you either accept it or the next money he’s gifted comes with conditions.

UnhappyHobbit · 19/02/2026 17:27

I have voted that you’re being unreasonable because of your rant about your daughter being spoilt. Spoilt by yourselves I presume?

You are not unreasonable if they are acting entitled and irresponsible and asking for hand outs. However I do think you should have installed the value of money ages ago if it is important to you that they learnt that.

They clearly need guidance but you seem to be a bit controlling.

Namechange568899542 · 19/02/2026 17:27

I get why you are disappointed, as someone a few years older than your son and currently unable to get onto the property ladder due to an insufficient deposit and no parental help, spending the lot on something else is crazy to me.

However, that said, if you intended it to be for him to use for a property, I think you should’ve waited until he mentioned being interested in moving out and then revealed you would help him by giving him X amount.

Giving anyone a large amount of money, especially before their frontal lobe has fully developed, without stipulations runs the risk of them spending it elsewhere. On the plus side, he has at least used it on some fantastic life experiences rather than booze or drugs whilst bumming about on an Xbox all day so it could always be worse.

YourOpenShaker · 19/02/2026 17:27

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.

Yep I cannot believe it either. He called him 3am time here my husband was asleep but picked up and said to him “I’ll sort it out for you first thing in the morning” and that is genuinely the first thing he did after breakfast and getting ready.

OP posts:
Freya1542 · 19/02/2026 17:27

@YourOpenShaker you have not failed as a parent

Your children will realise, soon enough, that their choices could have been better.

Try to let it go @YourOpenShaker, your life experience is different to theirs and although you (and many others on here) can see the value of their gifts and how it could have positively enhanced their lives, they're still learning, don't you think?

BerryTwister · 19/02/2026 17:27

MauriceTheMussel · 19/02/2026 17:26

Fuck me. Chill out.

Your kids are their own people, not people to represent and please you.

He got an Oxbridge degree. Spent a GIFT experiencing the world. Good for him.

I was an academic over achiever and went straight to work in the City. I didn’t travel or have a heyday and it’s a bitter disappointment to me. Let him live HIS life.

@MauriceTheMussel he’s not “living his life” though, is he. He’s got through more money than most people earn in a year, and he’s still asking for more. He’s about as dependent as anyone can be.

MauriceTheMussel · 19/02/2026 17:28

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.

Yeah, you do sound massively jealous.

He did work hard and achieve something. Not everyone gets an Oxford BA.

cramptramp · 19/02/2026 17:28

He can do what he likes. And because he knows he will be bailed out, he’ll carry on doing exactly what he likes. I don’t blame you for being disappointed, I’d be as well. I’d also be disappointed in my husband. And I’d tell them both when they are together how I feel about them. If he’s living at home what does he do for money because he wouldn’t get a penny from me. Ever.

likelysuspect · 19/02/2026 17:28

I think you're right to feel angry and disappointed and yes if there was a way that you could have avoided him having the money that should have been done

He isnt young, I dont really understand your husbands minimisation of your sons choices. He has made poor choices and that has ramifications.

I do think he should move out, not necessarily due to this but I think some of the responses on here is why we have a whole section of poeple in their 20s that still act and think like they're 15. He needs to manage an adult life

Soon someone will start a thread about their man baby boyfriend who cant manage money and that will be your son. Posters wont be so 'oh let him have a good time, travelling isnt wasted money' then.

We need to enable them to take on adult responsibility and manage that, it does them or society no favours to keep babying adults like this.

Clearinguptheclutter · 19/02/2026 17:28

I think you were a bit daft to just gift him that money. I'd gift that sort of sum (if i had it!) directly to a house deposit or pay off student loans or something like that but not just as free cash.

saltandvinegarpringles · 19/02/2026 17:28

goz · 19/02/2026 17:26

In what way is it jealous to want your adult child to be able to stand on their own two feet?
It sounds like when this machine doesn’t have his parents around to bail him out all the time he won’t be able to cope with life.

Jealous that he's succeeding (TikTok) and being invited to events and ceremonies without (in OP's words) having to "work hard".

MauriceTheMussel · 19/02/2026 17:28

BerryTwister · 19/02/2026 17:27

@MauriceTheMussel he’s not “living his life” though, is he. He’s got through more money than most people earn in a year, and he’s still asking for more. He’s about as dependent as anyone can be.

Then, if you’re the person he’s asking, the ol’ MN hackneyed “no is a complete sentence” springs to mind.

Isittimeformynapyet · 19/02/2026 17:29

SargeMarge · 19/02/2026 17:14

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?

Why would he think of being serious when his partner just throw more thousands at him?

Crikey! Do you really think he's in that kind of relationship with his DAD?!

Have I misread something?

goz · 19/02/2026 17:29

It’s now sounding made up.

StephensLass1977 · 19/02/2026 17:29

You keep throwing tens of thousands of pounds at your children and then wonder why they're so spoilt. That's honestly all I can think of to say about this.

AudreyHepburnseyes · 19/02/2026 17:29

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

Look, you haven’t failed as a parent. They all sound bright, they all sound like they have worked hard at school and at top universities and have gained great qualifications. That’s not a sign of poor parenting. They are adults making decisions - poor ones, but not ones for which you are responsible. At some point, you need to accept that they are separate people making their own way and they will make mistakes along the way.

Delphinium20 · 19/02/2026 17:29

I think you have every right to be angry, OP. And if you spoke with him in advance about using it wisely, and he didn't, it's hard for me to see you as a total shit parent. Perhaps naive, but your DS had previously done well in studies and grades, so you trusted him.

I'd 100 percent not give him a dime from now on out until he can show he's capable of learning his lesson.

Or, give all your kids a deadline (age 28, 30?) and if they haven't shown responsibility, give their inheritance to charity. Warn them in advance, of course, but hold the line.

DH's DF was a real jerk. His uncles bypassed DH's DF and gave DH inheritance. DH is using it wisely and is happy his DF didn't get a dime because it would have all been squandered.

LorenzoCalzone · 19/02/2026 17:29

I'd be disappointed cos my 49 year old brain knows how hard it is to get started with building career and getting a home. His cousins have made the smarter decision.

However part of me does understand his need to take time to enjoy life before starting adult life. He must be bright and have good prospects, and you can take some credit for that.

Not everyone aspires to owning a house and climbing a career ladder.

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