Winning the lottery is usually cause for celebration but what happens when it sparks a family feud? One father recently shared his story on Reddit’s Am I The A**hole forum, explaining how he bought tickets for the whole family as a fun tradition. When one son’s ticket won $60,000, the father claimed it, invested it, and watched it grow into $100,000.
Now, years later, as his son heads off to college, the father insists the original $60k was his to manage and plans to keep $40k of the growth for himself. His wife calls it stealing. He calls it smart investing. Reddit had a lot to say.
A dad invested his teen son’s lottery winnings for college



echnically, the father purchased the lottery ticket, so the winnings were his to claim. But by framing the tickets as belonging to each family member and then telling his sons the winnings would be for college, he created what financial ethicists call a moral contract. In other words, the money was understood to be for his children’s future, not his personal nest egg.
Financial advisors stress that when adults manage money for minors, whether it’s lottery winnings, inheritances, or custodial accounts, the expectation is that the funds and their growth belong to the child.
U.S. law reflects this principle through the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA), which requires custodians to manage assets “for the minor’s benefit” and not for personal use (Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute).
Even though this family isn’t operating under a formal UTMA account, the ethical principle is the same: the return on investment is generally considered part of the child’s money.
The father’s view that his “work” in investing entitles him to keep the $40,000 in gains reflects a misunderstanding of how investing works. Over the past decade, broad stock market performance has nearly doubled average portfolios, meaning the growth was not unusual skill but simply the outcome of market conditions.
As Nobel Prize-winning economist Eugene Fama has shown in decades of research, most investors don’t consistently “beat the market” but benefit from overall economic growth (University of Chicago Booth Review).
Psychologists also point out that this dispute is not just about money, but about trust.
A 2021 report from the American Psychological Association highlighted how financial secrecy within families is linked to long-term conflict and resentment, especially when children feel resources were withheld unfairly. By failing to communicate clearly that he intended to treat the gains as his, the father undermined his family’s expectations.
In practical terms, the fairest approach would be to consider both sons’ shares as full beneficiaries of the growth. If $100,000 now exists from a $60,000 start, then each boy’s portion should reflect the increase. That aligns with both ethical financial stewardship and the original promise that the winnings would be used for their college education.
Keeping the extra $40,000 for retirement may be legally defensible, but it strains moral credibility and risks lasting damage to family trust.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
Many Reddit users claimed OP was not the jerk


However, some disagreed and said that OP was wrong

Kernel of this kitty con? His harvest hold highlights the hitch in hazy handoffs, proving promised pots please when portions pad the pride, sans the “snag the surplus” sting.
Would you divvy the double or dock the dream dip, full flip or fair fold? What’s your wildest “windfall whoops”, the shared stock spike or sibling split squabble? Spill your savings sagas below; let’s lighten the ledger with “we won anyway” wins!









