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Teen Refuses To Split Her Dead Sister’s College Fund With Stepmom’s Daughter, And Her Dad Loses It

by Leona Pham
January 12, 2026
in Social Issues

Money has a way of exposing fault lines in families, especially when grief and blended relationships are involved. For this teenager, a college fund tied to painful loss has suddenly become a source of pressure and guilt she never asked for. What was meant to secure her future is now being framed as something she’s obligated to share.

After losing her mother and sister, her father’s remarriage brought new expectations into her life, including demands she never agreed to.

Now, she’s being told what her late sister would have wanted, by people who never even knew her. Was she wrong to draw a hard line, or is she simply protecting the last thing that still feels like hers? Scroll down to see why this situation has divided her family.

A teen is pressured by her father to share a college fund after her family is reshaped by loss

Teen Refuses To Split Her Dead Sister’s College Fund With Stepmom’s Daughter, And Her Dad Loses It
not the actual photo

'AITA for refusing to split my college fund with my stepsister?'

Okay, this is kinda awkward to be typing but here goes.

I (17F) have a college fund started by my grandparents (maternal and paternal) with some of the money coming from my parents.

The fund was originally for me and my sister but my mom and sister died four years ago and my grandparents,

who hold the account, chose to leave it all for me and continued paying into it.

My dad remarried 18 months after my mom and sister died and he has a stepdaughter

who is the same age as my sister would be if she were alive.

She's a high school senior now and talk has turned to her going to college.

Her mom was single until she married my dad and never had the opportunity to start a fund before.

They have something saved but it's not enough and won't be.

So my dad asked me to share mine with her.

He said it was always intended to be for two people and my sister would want her money to be used by someone in the family.

I told him it was being used by someone in the family, me, her sister, and he replied that stepsister is our sister too.

I told him no. I only have one sister. This is how I feel.

I know people will give me s__t for that but I only have one sibling and that's how it will always be.

That's not personal against my stepsister but we're not sisters or even family beyond her mom being married to my dad.

My dad said he was telling me I need to share the money. I told him no.

He went to my grandparents (his parents) and they said it was for me since my sister could no longer use it.

He went to my maternal grandparents then, because they were the two

who originally set up the account and they told him they have no obligation to fund

my stepsister going to college because she isn't their granddaughter.

He's back to trying to force me to say yes.

His wife and her daughter are also telling me it's the right thing to do

and it's what we do for family and my sister would want me to

(which pisses me off because they never met my sister let alone know what she would want). AITA?

Hey everyone! This got way more attention than I was expecting and so I am going to post a response to some stuff here

because I don't know how to reply to every specific question asked individually.

I don't worry that my dad will get his hands on the money,

I'm not going to be forced into this and I will be gone before I have access to the money.

This has already really hurt my relationship with my dad. I'm not really sure there will be one in a year.

I'll be 18 and can live my own life and get some peace from all this.

I'll finish high school at my grandparents probably since that's where I plan to move to once I can just leave this house.

It makes me sad but I lost so much already, I'm going to be okay. It will just take some time.

People have talked about his marrying again 18 months later and I know there has been debate on this.

I didn't pay much attention to this in my original post because I knew I would get s__t for voicing how I felt.

But it sucked. He has handled everything in the worst possible way and I hold some resentment toward him for it.

I do think he deserves to be happy, but I have been drowning in grief since I lost my mom and sister.

Knowing he could try to replace his wife and daughter so soon after we lost them sucks.

It hurts me. But he would see me as a brat if I told him this again. I already expect people to say that when they read this.

There’s a particular kind of grief that settles in when loss collides with obligation. It’s not loud or dramatic. It’s quiet, heavy, and deeply personal.

For the OP, this college fund isn’t just money set aside for tuition. It’s one of the last concrete pieces of a life that included her mother and sister. When that fund became something others felt entitled to redistribute, it reopened wounds that were never given time to heal.

At the emotional core of this story is a teenager carrying adult-sized grief while being asked to make an adult-sized sacrifice. The OP lost her mother and sibling during formative years, a kind of loss that research consistently shows can reshape identity, emotional safety, and trust.

According to clinical studies published through the National Institutes of Health, the death of a parent or sibling during adolescence is among the most distressing life events a young person can experience, often leading to prolonged grief and heightened vulnerability when stability is threatened.

What makes this situation especially painful isn’t just the request to share the fund. It’s how the request is framed. The father invokes fairness. The stepmother and stepsister invoke “what family does.”

Most damaging of all, they invoke the voice of the sister who died, claiming she would have wanted this. That crosses an emotional boundary.

Psychologically, using a deceased loved one’s memory to pressure a grieving child can feel like erasure rather than inclusion. It takes something sacred and turns it into leverage.

Moreover, this conflict isn’t about rejecting a stepsibling. It’s about protecting emotional continuity. Family therapists often note that blended families struggle most when bonds are assumed instead of built.

Psychology Today explains that forcing closeness or shared sacrifice before emotional trust exists tends to create resentment, especially when children are still grieving.

There’s also a practical reality being ignored. College funds, particularly 529 plans or similar accounts, are structured intentionally. They’re often owned by grandparents, not parents, and contributors make deliberate decisions about beneficiaries.

Financial experts note that grandparents are under no legal or ethical obligation to redirect funds to non-grandchildren, and ownership matters in how these accounts are managed.

When viewed through this lens, the OP’s refusal isn’t selfish. It’s protective. She’s safeguarding one of the few remaining assurances tied to her future and her past. The adults around her may be trying to move forward, but grief doesn’t follow shared timelines.

The most realistic and humane takeaway here isn’t compromise at all costs. It’s respect for boundaries, especially when they belong to a grieving child. Sometimes, the most loving thing a family can do is stop asking and allow someone to keep what helps them survive.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

This group called out emotional manipulation and urged involving grandparents

ThePunchlineIsFunny − NTA - I would tell your grand parents what is happening and get them to put a stop to it.

Your dad and step mother are trying to manipulate you into feeling guilty, and now they've roped your step sister into it too.

Do not give in please, but it is downright awful that they're forcing you to choose.

-Edit- Wow thank you for all the upvotes, really wasn't expecting it but glad a lot of us can agree on this here.

I hope OP goes running to grandparents.

[Reddit User] − NTA In point of fact your father was already an a__hole for zombifying your sisters memory

to puppet words into her mouth, but he made himself a bigger a__hole when upon failing

to acquire your agreement he shopped around to family hoping to pressure you into it.

He, your step-mother, and step sister have since repeatedly reaffirmed that they're the assholes here,

especially because neither your step-sister nor your step-mother had ever even met them.

It's trashy to guilt people through the memory of a lost loved one. My recommendation?

Move out ASAP, and before then reaffirm your beliefs by changing all verbal references to your step-mom and step-sister to, "dads wife",

"dads wifes daughter", or by your step-mothers first name. Bratty perhaps, but clearly some people have gotten far too comfortable.

pink_doritos − NTA, then using your sister is so manipulative, do not back down.

Flocceenaucee − I'm sorry for your loss. Your dad is TA. He married some randomer 18 MONTHS after your mum and sister died

and wants to further on obliterate your sister's memory by giving her money to someone else.

A randomer whom you are only aquainted with because her mom married your dad?

Abd is trying to harass manipulate and guilt you into giving it away?

The hell with that load of bollox Edit spelling Edit thank you so much for the award. Lifted my spirits after a horrible day. Thank you.

These commenters stressed the fund was intended only for OP by grandparents

AmIBeingPunkd- − NTA Your mom and your grandparents did not contribute to your college fund

thinking it would go to the stepsister your mom never knew would even exist.

ETA them pulling the family card when it’s convenient, as well as emotionally manipulating you by USING your dead sister

is beyond disgusting and they better work their a** off if they want to see your stepsis go to college

because she should not be touching your college fund. Sorry I’m LIVID.

Snwspider − Definitely NTA especially since both sets of grandparents directly told your dad it’s for your use only.

Like everyone else keeps saying, talk to grandparents about dads continued harassment about it

MrBinkz − NTA. If your grandparents wanted you to share it then it may be a different story.

Imo its a s__tty move for your father and his new family to try and force you to share it with someone you don't want to.

Also I'm terribly sorry for the loss of your mother and sister.

This group advised protecting finances and limiting dad’s access or pressure

[Reddit User] − NTA. “No, what we do for family is respect that our grandparents made a decision as to what they want done with their own money.”

[Reddit User] − Asking is kinda one thing but demanding and expecting you to say yes is such a mess.

Make sure it never comes into any bank accounts your dad can access and also,

if they keep this up, see if you can spend time at your grandparents. Nta

shimmydancer − Don’t sign anything that they give you.

Take any paperwork to your grandparents so they can have their lawyers look at it if you do not have one.

vtheatretech − NTA let your grandparents keep control of it so Dad can't get access.

If he wants her college funded so badly he can do it. And I get it.

She's not automatically a sister because your dad married someone.

For them to try to force the bond and bring your (bio) sister up is mean. Edited for clarity

These Redditors argued the step-sister’s education isn’t OP’s responsibility

SoToConclude − It's not your fault that you had two parents for most of your life and two sets of grandparents who planned ahead.

It sucks that she only had one parent, and an undisclosed number of grandparents,

and none of them chose or were in a position to save for her. But that doesn't make it your grandparents to fund a complete stranger.

I would wonder if maybe when she was living with her single mum, whether she was eligible for more financial support programs

and that by moving into a 2-parent household the combined household income means she now isn't.

If that's the case, I wonder if maybe her mum didn't realise this on moving in,

and now is freaked out that there's suddenly a massive cost that she had anticipated getting support for, but that's still not your fault.

It's your grandparents choice at the end of the day, and they chose a long time ago that the whole of the fund went to you.

NTA, and ask your grandparents not to automatically swap the account into your name at 18,

so there is no chance of your dad putting extra pressure on you when he presumes you get access to it,

and they can make payments straight to your college or give you money for set things.

If you think he will keep up the pressure, you are fully justified in talking to both sets of grandparents

about your worries that he will keep pressuring you until you say yes.

teresajs − NTA The account owners (your grandparents) have said no. And the beneficiary (you) has said no.

Your father needs to stop trying to guilt you. Tell both sets of grandparents that Dad is still hassling you about this.

If necessary, you may need to move in with your grandparents. Your Dad and his wife still have a year to save for Stepsister's college.

Your Stepsister could get a part-time job and work. There are other options and they need to move onto considering them.

This group emphasized respecting grandparents’ financial decisions

KBTR1066 − This thread is the reason I wish we could have some sort of verified_AITA subreddit.

Because I would be astonished to learn that the average age of the responders to this thread are older than 21 or 22.

Almost every response is selfish and entitled,

and anyone who cares to question the sanctity of OP's right to be kinda selfish and petty gets downvoted into oblivion. ESH.

OP, your dad is kind of an a__hole because it's not fair of him to use the memory of your sister

to manipulate you into sharing your college fund with your step-sister,

but the way that the other responses in here are making him out to be the devil for trying to get you to share are not fair to him.

If this is all it is, this alone does not make him a bad person the way most of these circle-jerk responses to your post might make you want to...

Based on the evidence presented, he is not trying to forget about your mom or your sister,

but he may be trying to fill that grief-dug hole,

and you shouldn't be listening to all of these other posters who try to make you believe that makes him an a__hole.

You lost a mother and a sister, but he lost a wife and a daughter, and it's not fair to just overlook that.

And as for all the people who argue that he remarried too soon...

What's the right amount of time? And who are you to decide that? Is it 3 years? Why? Five? Why? Ten? Why.

You do not get to judge when a person decides when they've grieved enough and are ready for another relationship.

But OP, you're not off the hook either. You're kind of an a__hole too.

Unless I've missed it in a response, your reasoning for not wanting to share is basically "It's mine, why should I?"

Which, I'm sorry to have to say, is selfish reasoning.

Yeah, fine, you don't OWE your step-sister anything, but the degree to which your post and what responses

I've read seem to indicate over and over "they're not my family" suggests to me that you've got a lot of unresolved grief issues.

And that's okay, just as no one should judge your dad, no one should judge you.

But the degree to which there is a problem with unresolved grief and you don't deal with it,

and you use it as an excuse to be kinda mean to these people who,

like it or not, are part of your family now, does allow for some mantle of assholery to be laid on your shoulders too.

If you really think about it, and delve emotionally into why you feel this way,

and consider the needs of others in addition to just the needs of yourself,

or if there's some legitimate reason why you don't want to share with your step family, then okay.

I might personally argue that you're still being kind of selfish, but I don't think I could call you an a__hole.

It's just that at this point your reasoning basically seems like "It's mine, I do t wanna."

and you should want there to be a better reason than that.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Your grandparents made their decision. Its not your job to see her through school.

Its one thing to expect you to be kind, and accepting of a step-sister. It's another to financially gift her a portion of your college fund.

Many readers sympathized deeply with the teen’s refusal, while a few questioned whether empathy should outweigh ownership.

Should a young person be expected to sacrifice their future to fix an adult’s financial anxiety? Or is saying “no” sometimes the healthiest form of self-preservation? 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%

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

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