AITAH for Refusing to Pay for My Brother’s Destination Wedding After He Spent His Savings on a Car?
When it comes to family and finances, things get messy fast. But what happens when a sibling expects you to foot the bill for their life choices—because you were responsible with your money?
That’s exactly the dilemma one user faced when their brother demanded they cover his destination wedding after blowing through his savings on a luxury car. In this AITAH story, we’re diving into family guilt, financial boundaries, and whether being the “stable” sibling means you owe anyone anything.
The Scenario: A Tale of Two Brothers

Meet Aryan, a 34-year-old software engineer who’s always been financially responsible. He’s saved steadily, built an emergency fund, invested smartly, and lives within his means. His younger brother Rohan, 28, is the opposite—he lives for the moment, spends impulsively, and recently dropped a huge chunk of his savings on a brand-new sports car.
A few months later, Rohan got engaged and decided to host a lavish destination wedding in Goa.
But there was a problem: he was broke.
Naturally, he turned to Aryan, saying, “You have the money. You’re my brother. You should help.”
Aryan declined.
The Fallout: Family Turns Against Aryan





