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Woman Refuses To Help Pay For Fiancé’s Best Friend’s Medical Bills, Calls Him A “Loser”

by Layla Bui
January 6, 2026
in Social Issues

In relationships, it’s essential to have open conversations about money and expectations. This woman and her fiancé have clearly defined financial boundaries, with her covering most of the expenses due to her higher-paying job.

But when her fiancé’s best friend needs financial help for medical bills and attending their wedding, she’s left with a tough decision. Should she sacrifice her own financial goals to help someone she doesn’t get along with, or is it unreasonable for her fiancé to ask her to do so?

This situation has left her feeling conflicted, with her fiancé calling her selfish and cruel. Is she wrong for putting her foot down, or is her request to protect her savings and goals perfectly reasonable? Keep reading to explore this tough dilemma.

A woman refuses to use her savings to pay for her fiancé’s best friend’s expenses after a motorcycle accident

Woman Refuses To Help Pay For Fiancé’s Best Friend’s Medical Bills, Calls Him A “Loser”
not the actual photo

'AITA for telling my fiancé that his best friend can’t be his best man?'

I know how it sounds. My fiancé (29M) is an amazing guy, sweet, funny, attractive, and hard-working.

I (29F) was impressed with him from the moment I met him and we’ve been together 6 years.

We are devoted to each other and working toward building our shared life.

We each put a percentage of our earnings into two funds: one for our wedding (which is a year away)

and another for a down payment on a home.

We each pay the same percentage, but I pay a much larger amount because I went into a higher income field.

We’ve budgeted it out pretty well. At this rate, we’ll have enough to buy a home around the same time as our wedding, as planned.

As to the wedding, we both wanted a small one, and my fiancé and I decided to have a destination wedding.

We are paying for the entire wedding ourselves.

My family’s pretty poor, so I’ve also been saving a portion of my remaining paycheck

to be able to pay for all of them to come to the wedding for free.

I’m also paying for one of my bridesmaids who went into teaching and doesn’t make much.

My fiancé wouldn’t really have the disposable cash to do that,

but his family can afford to pay (somewhat wealthy) and is happy for the vacation.

The problem arose last week. My fiancé’s best friend Tom (30M) who he asked to be his best man, got in an accident.

It was likely entirely his fault as he was riding his motorcycle drunk.

He suffered significant injuries, is going to have some major medical bills, and admitted to my fiancé that he doesn’t think he can afford to come.

My fiancé wants to pay for him (several thousand dollars) and lend him money to help cover his medical bills.

But, especially with everything going on, my fiancé does not have and is unlikely to be able to get the money to do either.

I could afford to do both, but I don’t want to. Truthfully, I can’t stand this friend.

He often rides or drives drunk, does not have a job, makes snarky comments about my fiancé that he insists are just jokes

(but that I know actually affect my fiancé), and lives in his parents basement while ignoring their well-being.

I was willing to have him up there as best man because my fiancé considers him a brother and it’s his choice.

I wasn’t happy about it, but I wasn’t about to throw a tantrum about it.

But with everything going on, my fiancé has suggested taking a huge chunk of our savings for a house to help, and I said no.

We got in a huge fight and he called me selfish and cruel, at which point I lost it,

told him his loser friend did this to himself, and that there was no way in hell I’d pay anything for his sorry ass.

I ended by saying, “if he can’t afford to come, he can’t be your best man.”

He hasn’t spoken to me since last night and slept in the couch.

While I still think I’m on solid footing, I wonder if I went to far. AITA?

EDIT: Thank you to everyone that’s responded. I will try to work through all of those this evening.

I just wanted to make an edit based on a question/issue a lot of people have brought up: our finances.

To clarify, we have talked about everything, especially financial expectations, to make sure we’re on the same page.

My fiancé’s dad is a family law attorney, and as soon as it became clear we were in it for the long-term,

he sat us down, discussed with us the common pitfalls he saw that ended relationships, and gave us his advice to avoid them.

His advice revolves largely around open communication and setting expectations and boundaries early, especially around money.

So when we each graduated, we talked about the career paths we wanted.

My fiancé decided he’d rather take a lower paying job, with normal hours, less stress, and more time outside of work.

He wasn’t worried about helping his parents out later in life, because they are very well set up.

He also wasn’t worried that much about developing a big retirement account,

because he’s very likely to inherit enough to survive on comfortably.

I, on the other hand, likely will not have any inheritance

and will want to provide for my parents' medical expenses and retirement as they get older.

I also have a good amount of student loan debt (he doesn’t because his parents could afford to pay for it)

and while we both really enjoy traveling, he’d be willing to cut back on it significantly to have an easier job year-round.

I wouldn’t want to burden him with those costs (the ones that I brought into the relationship),

as I feel that would natural cause resentment, especially if it meant he had to work a job he enjoyed less to help share the costs with me.

So I took a high stress job that I don’t enjoy and that requires me to work longer hours, but that pays significantly more.

We agreed we each should be able to make that choice and decided a fair way to handle finances would be to:

(1) create a joint account for common expenses: rent, bills, food, entertainment, work clothes.

At his father’s suggestion, we put in writing specifically what the fund could be used for,

agreed that anything outside that list would need to be approved by both of us, and that if the account is dissolved,

we each get back what we put in and we split any interest evenly.

We each pay in 35% of our incomes.

Because of the difference in our incomes, about 80% of the fund ultimately come from my income,

which I think is reasonable because we’re a team, we’re building a life together, and the difficulties of my job invariably affect him too.

(2) We create other joint savings accounts as needed for new projects,

each the same way with a written agreement as to what they can be used for.

We have one for the house (each pay 20% of our incomes) and one for the wedding (each pay 10%).

(3) We each get to keep the remaining 35% for our personal spending.

My fiancé does not have that much left over, he has some taken out pre-taxes for a 401k and he uses the rest for his car and a few hobbies.

Right now he voluntarily went part-time because his work place was going to need to fire people

if they didn’t get volunteers due to the current situation, and we’re in a good position otherwise,

so he has pretty much no disposable income.

I have a ton, but it goes mostly toward yearly vacations for us, my student loans

(I’m paying twice what is owed each month to pay them down),

my retirement account, an account set up for my parents future expenses, and my car payments.

Right now it is also going toward helping with his car payments and hobbies.

So yes, I could cut back on certain things and be able to pay for his friend, but it would affect those other things that I’ve worked hard for.

I realize this system would not work for everyone, but it works for us, and I am definitely not financially abusing my fiancé.

'UPDATE AITA for telling my fiancé his best friend can’t be his best man?'

It’s been a little over two months since my original post and a lot has happened.

In the days after that argument, my fiancé and I had a number of heart to hearts.

We each apologized for how we behaved. He admitted that his friend had done some terrible things and,

after some soul searching, that he and his friend do not have a healthy relationship.

He loves the guy, as his friend had been there for him through some tough times, but knows Tom needs to change.

I thought hard about several of the comments made on the original post, and made a tough choice.

I told him that I hated the idea of bailing Tom out, and would never agree to help with his medical bills,

but provided Tom made some effort to change, I would pay for him to come to the wedding with my own separate funds.

I love my fiancé more than anything and I don’t want anything to mar our wedding or the start of our marriage.

Long story short, we sat down with Tom’s parents (who were also fed up with him and had previously refused to help with any bills)

to discuss the best way to help him.

We all ultimately agreed that we would cover some of his costs (us the wedding and his parents the medical bills),

but only if he accepted responsibility for what he’s done and hit some concrete milestones toward changing,

including successfully completing a program at an in-patient treatment facility for his addictions.

All four of us sat down with him to make this offer. I won’t go into details, but it didn’t go well.

My fiancé finally lost it and told Tom that he’d stuck by him through years of s__tty choices,

and that if Tom wouldn’t get help, he didn’t even want him as a friend, much less a best man.

Tom told us all to f__k off.. We hadn’t seen or heard from him since, and it has been incredibly hard on my fiancé.

Then, this past weekend, my fiancé received a text from Tom.

It wasn’t long, but thanked for everything he had done for Tom, apologized “for everything,”

and let him know that he was on his way to a treatment facility.

He hoped he could stand at my fiancé’s side at our wedding, like my fiancé had always stood at his.

My fiancé is trying to be cautious, but it clearly meant so much to him,

and I know he believes against all odds that his friend will become a better man. I have my doubts, but you know what? I hope he does too.

Thanks to everyone that gave me advice, let me feel heard, and helped me become a little better as well.

In this story, the OP’s feelings stem from a very real psychological and relational phenomenon: chronic caregiving demands can contribute to significant stress and burnout when not balanced with adequate support.

Research in caregiver and parental stress shows that being responsible for another person’s needs, especially a baby who won’t bottle‑feed and requires constant care, can lead to emotional exhaustion, loss of personal time, and decreased well‑being when relief is scarce.

This type of strain is recognized as caregiver burden, a clinical concept describing the physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion that caregivers experience.

Parental stress and burnout occur when the demands of parenting are high and the available supports are limited.

Scientific studies show that sustained parenting stress is repeatedly linked with lower parental well‑being across populations, regardless of child age or gender, and that higher stress is associated with decreased life enjoyment and emotional functioning.

While much of the literature focuses on school‑aged children, the underlying finding is clear: sustained stress without adequate respite harms parental mental health and that applies well to the early months of caregiving for an infant.

Psychological theories like the spillover‑crossover model further explain why work stress and family stress are interconnected.

According to this model, stress from one domain (like parenting or work) can “spill over” into another and even “cross over” to affect a partner’s emotional state, creating mutual tension within the household if one partner’s needs aren’t addressed.

This means that the boyfriend’s long evenings away, even for personal destressing, can inadvertently add to the OP’s emotional load rather than relieve it.

It isn’t unreasonable for a partner to want support from the other, especially in a shared caregiving context. Research shows that partner involvement in childcare and emotional support for caregivers significantly improves parental well‑being and reduces stress, particularly in the early stages of child‑rearing. (Wiley Online Library)

Although that study looked at parents of children with special needs, the underlying principle holds: when parents feel supported, they experience better emotional outcomes and less burnout.

At the same time, financial disagreements between couples are well‑established as one of the biggest sources of relationship conflict. Studies of couple dynamics show that money is a primary stressor in relationships, especially when partners have differing priorities around spending, saving, and shared goals.

This doesn’t negate the OP’s point, it simply highlights that money and emotional support are both key stress points in partnerships.

In healthy relationships, communication about needs, responsibilities, and compromise is crucial.

Money experts and relationship counselors commonly recommend scheduling discussions about finances and expectations, openly sharing feelings about decisions, and finding work‑able solutions together rather than leaving one partner feeling unsupported.

From this perspective, the OP’s request for her boyfriend to come home earlier some days so she can get even a short break, a chance to eat, shower, or rest, is reasonable and grounded in psychological research on parental stress and the benefits of partner support.

Her role as primary caregiver without adequate respite makes her emotional needs significant, not trivial. Asking for help does not make her selfish, it reflects the real toll of continuous caregiving without relief.

Viewed through these lenses, the OP’s feelings and request are not only understandable but consistent with what research shows about maintaining mental health and equitable teamwork in a partnership.

She isn’t asking for constant attendance, just support on days when her stress is especially high, which aligns with principles of shared caregiving and mutual respect.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These commenters strongly support the idea that the fiancé should not be expected to use joint savings for the best man’s medical bills or travel costs

JackNotName − NTA You need to sit your fiancé down and tell him point blank

that he is asking his fiancee to sacrifice her values and risk the down payment for your future house for a man

who frequently drives drunk and is currently in a situation of his own making.

Personally, I wouldn't be able to remain friends with someone who drives drunk.

Putting your own life in danger, I don't really care, but risking other people's lives?

That makes you among the lowest of the low in my mind. Your fiancé needs a serious reevaluation of his morals.

jayelwhitedear − My question is why is this all falling on YOUR shoulders?

If Drunk Tom wants to attend your wedding and stand by your fiance that badly,

surely Drunk Tom can find some other means of making that happen besides the Bank of Red 2 Blue?

JMLKO − NTA this is more than him just being the best man at your wedding.

It's you financing his bad decision to drive a motorcycle drunk.

No way your married life should start off with a loan to him that impacts your ability to get a house, which you both saved for.

It's not your responsibility to carry him financially.

OshetDeadagain − I have to go with NTA. I would do the same in your shoes.

You're justified in your stance and it's unreasonable to take from your shared wedding and house fund to pay for medical expenses AND travel.

If your husband doesn't want to/can't use his own money for it, then I'm with you - his friend made his own bed, he can lay in it.

TrashyMF − NTA, his friend is irresponsible. Your fiance should use his personal savings, not your shared savings.

BexW858 − YTA Think I’m bucking the trend with this opinion, and whilst I understand your stance

and if your future husband wanted to help his friend financially for virtually any other reason

than attend your wedding and be his best man, I’d be completely on your side.

This guy is your fiancés best friend; yes he needs to grow up and yes he’s in hospital with mounting medical bills

because he was a d__che and deserves no sympathy.

But your fiancé is not asking you to use your house deposit savings to cover medical bills or pay for mates frivolous lifestyle.

If hed of been sober and came of the bike would you still have the same opinion about the money?

You have a clear dislike for this guy. I doubt you want him at the wedding let alone best man and he’s given you the perfect out.

You haven’t said how long they’ve known each other and been best mates?

Don’t make your fiancé chose between you and him as you might not like the answer!

If he does chose you, I give your marriage 5 years before the resentment really takes a hold and destroys it

[Reddit User] − NTA - it's not your responsibility to use your hard earned savings to pay for a drunk driver's mistake.

However, I think it would be fair that if you guys are paying for your teacher friend, then you can pay for his best man to attend.

I just don't think he deserves the extra money for the hospital bills.

kimbybimby − NTA but could you compromise and pay for him to attend the wedding but stop the financial support there?

This group offers a more nuanced view, acknowledging the emotional complexity of the situation, but also stressing the importance of mutual consent and open communication

Samanthuh-maybe − NAH. You need to sit him down and explain how joint finances work.

Sometimes the two of you will decide to invest in someone, situations like this, knowing it’ll be at a loss.

Like helping your parents get into nursing homes down the line.

That’s an altruistic investment that won’t be returned, but you do it anyway because it’s the right thing to do.

There’s nothing wrong with that, or with helping out a friend who won’t be able to return the favor, etc.

That’s what your fiancé thinks is happening, you’re investing in someone because it’s the right thing to do.

But that’s not what’s happening, and there is something wrong with both parties not consenting to the investment.

This dude is just a bad investment.

Drunk drivers that repeat their mistake over and over are displaying a complete lack of regard for their own lives and the lives of others,

their own finances, freedom, and future as well as that of others.

__This isn’t a mistake, it’s a choice being made and that choice can reliably tell you

that this won’t be the last time you’ll go out of pocket for this dude. You’re not a bank or his parents, you’re his friends.

Your job is to be there for him emotionally, encourage him to improve, and wish him well - not fund his f__k ups.

__ It sounds cold and harsh but this is your life together.

You need to prioritize what’s most important, and a guy that doesn’t even value his own life

over a good time is not more important than your own future.

Buy your house and enjoy your wedding.

If he wants to come that badly, then he will take complete responsibility for himself and make that happen.

If he can’t, that’s not your fault or your problem. Fiancé needs to prioritize you and accept that.

--nEgativezEro-- − ESH First and foremost, obviously, is Tom. Repeatedly driving drunk on a motorcycle is just immensely stupid.

Secondly your husband. Impacting your savings so heavily is a foolish move, and it's not selfish or cruel

to put your entire future on hold so you can pay for his friend's mistakes. Lastly on you.

You're obviously mostly in the right here, but I don't necessarily agree with refusing to let him come to the wedding at all.

Paying for your whole family to come, as well as a friend too, is pretty unfair to your fiance.

While at face value it's fair that you're both contributing an equal percentage of your paychecks,

your higher earnings allows you more freedom to do things you want that he's unable to do.

You paying for multiple people while he's not allowed to pay for his expected best man is really unfair

and brings an unfortunate power dynamic with the finances that could be tricky once married.

I feel the best compromise is to agree to paying for his travel and lodging arrangements as you're doing for your family.

Paying for any of his medical bills should come solely from any of your fiance's "extra" money that doesn't impact your future plans.

pinap45454 − ESH/NTA. You don't get to choose his best man, I feel like these issues come up a lot

and I think folks tend to gloss over the significant underlying issues often present in these situations

and instead focus on the objective merits of their grievances with the individual at issue.

The real issue is that your fiancé is devoted to an individual you don't like or respect for what seem to be some pretty valid reasons

(e.g. drunk driving, treats your fiancé poorly). We don't need to love or understand all of our partner's friends and relationships,

but a disagreement of this caliber, especially over a non family member, is a red flag.

Ultimately, this is an issue of values and I would really encourage you to work through this with your partner before getting married.

You of course are not obligated to pay this person's medical bills or for him to travel to your wedding.

You also have the right to be clear with your fiancé that you take issue with him using his own money

for this purpose to the extent it has any impact on you, for instance increasing your own financial burden with regards to the wedding.

Kayliee73 − NAH (with the exception of the drunk driving friend). Let me share a story.

My husband was treated just horribly by his family. Abuse? Check. Ridicule?

Check. Now we are in a place where we have a little cash built up.

His brother inherited the house when their mom died. He is a hoarder and has completely ruined it.

Now he needs a new house with his dying wife. They needed $1200 more for the down payment.

My husband wanted to loan it to him. I really didn't. Like not even a little.

We discussed the pros and cons. My husband just really wanted to. He loves his family.

So, ultimately I decided there was no better use for that money than to bring my husband peace.

So we sent it. He thinks his brother will pay it back. I am pretty sure he won't but my husband is happy.

You are in a similar situation here. You have the same choice I did.

Keep the money and use it for wedding and home or loan it to best friend and give your fiance the gift of peace.

Neither choice is bad here. It is up to you as this is your money.

These commenters point out that while it’s not unreasonable to have concerns over the friend’s actions

thepirategirl − YTA if you're willing to pay for your friends and family, but are against paying for his best man.

Don't want to give him money for medical bills? Don't. Have issues with his behavior?

That's something separate from paying for your fiancee's best man to attend your wedding.

I'd personally agree to use savings to pay for the best man to come out.

But at the same time, discuss your concerns over his behavior with your fiancee.

Tnachmed − “if he can’t afford to come, he can’t be your best man I'm going to be 1000% blunt...

this will DEFINITELY bite you in the a** later because you're paying for your friend to come to the wedding.

That money could be used toward the house.

Granted that's your money you're bringing in but he may not see it that way when he puts 2 and 2 together to make that case.

This is, in his mind, his brother/best friend who is in a tough situation.

lightwoodorchestra − NTA. You're not telling him who his best man can be;

you're declining to mess up your financial future to pay for it. There's a massive difference.

Is it wrong for the woman to refuse to pay for Tom’s medical bills and travel costs, or is she justified in protecting her financial future?

Redditers largely supported her stance, though some felt a compromise, like helping Tom attend the wedding but not cover his medical expenses, could have been a fair middle ground.

What do you think? Should she prioritize their future, or is it worth stretching their budget to help a friend in need? Share your thoughts below!

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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