AITAH for Not Helping My Mom Financially After She Paid for My Brother’s Destination Wedding?
Family finances are messy enough but when favoritism, double standards, and major life events get thrown into the mix, things can explode. This r/AITAH post has Reddit split: is the original poster a selfish child, or just tired of always being second place?
Let’s unpack a story of weddings, wallets, and one adult child finally saying, “Enough.”
OP, a 27-year-old woman, starts her post by laying it all out: she’s been financially independent since she graduated college. Rent, bills, groceries—she’s handled everything on her own. Meanwhile, her younger brother, 24, has been getting major help from their mom. We’re talking rent paid, car insurance covered, and even a “small loan” here and there for concert tickets and travel.
But the real breaking point came this year when their mom paid for the entire destination wedding for her brother and his fiancée.
We’re not just talking about contributing a little toward catering. No, OP says her mom covered airfare for both families, a luxury beach resort, the ceremony, the reception, and even the bridal party’s outfits. The price tag? Over $40,000.
A Surprise Ask

A few months later, OP gets a call from her mom.
She’s struggling financially. Turns out, the wedding expenses were more than she could handle, and now she’s behind on mortgage payments. She asked OP for “a little help”—about $3,000 to get back on track.
OP declined. Not because she didn’t have the money (she did), but because she was hurt and fed up. She calmly explained to her mom that she felt taken for granted, especially since she’s never received that kind of support—even when she really could’ve used it.
Her mom burst into tears, accused OP of being cold-hearted, and said, “I did what I could for your brother because he needed it. But you’re better off—why wouldn’t you want to help your own mother?”
Since then, OP’s extended family has been blowing up her phone. One aunt even said she’s “turning her back on the woman who raised her,” and that “a good daughter doesn’t keep score.”
So OP asked Reddit: AITAH for not helping my mom financially after she drained her money paying for my brother’s wedding?
Let’s Break It Down: Is OP Actually the Villain Here?


