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Mom Expects $900 Monthly From Her Children, Then Calls Them Ungrateful For Hesitating

by Marry Anna
May 19, 2026
in Social Issues

Supporting parents later in life is often seen as a meaningful way to give back, particularly in cultures where family duty runs deep.

Still, there is a big difference between helping when someone is struggling and feeling pressured into a financial commitment that may affect your own family’s future.

The line between responsibility and resentment can become blurry very quickly.

Mom Expects $900 Monthly From Her Children, Then Calls Them Ungrateful For Hesitating
Not the actual photo

'AITA If I refuse to give my Mom money every month?'

My mom wants all three of us, M, F, F, in our 30s to give her $300 a month each. She said this is for her retirement and that this...

I would be fine with this if she had no income but she has multiple properties she rents out that earns more than we do every month.

All three of us don’t live at home and have children to take care of. My sisters are both stay at home moms.

Their husbands will be the ones to pay this. Here is some of our conversation:

I asked if she gives her parents money every month and she said no but she has given money to them before.

I told her we are all raising kids, paying rent, the economy is terrible. Her response was $300 is not much. The average worker here earns $1000 a month.

I told her I would never tax my kids like this while they’re trying to build their lives. Her response is that it’s our duty as her children.

To try and be non biased she did spend a lot of money sending us to private school.

In return I do have a decent job earning higher than the average.

I feel like this is just pure greed. Would I be the a__hole for refusing?

EDIT: We are Asians so it’s expected of us. The problem for me is we each have 2 parents plus 2 in laws and she’s the only one asking for...

Our father isn’t asking for anything but he does have retirement. My mom does not. I couldn’t imagine if I had to send $300 each to 4 parents.

Family expectations around money are rarely just about money, and this story sits right at the intersection of culture, obligation, and financial pressure.

In this case, the OP is facing a request that feels less like occasional support and more like a recurring financial obligation. Their mother wants each of her three adult children, all in their 30s with families of their own, to contribute $300 every month toward her retirement.

On paper, the request sounds rooted in filial responsibility, a familiar expectation in many Asian households.

But the emotional friction comes from context: the mother already earns rental income from multiple properties and appears financially stable, while the children are juggling rent, childcare, and an unforgiving economy.

The OP’s frustration becomes easier to understand when viewed through that lens. To them, this feels less like helping a struggling parent and more like being assigned a lifelong subscription fee for existing.

Their mother’s argument, however, comes from a different worldview. She paid for private schooling, invested heavily in her children’s futures, and may see monthly support not as “payment” but as a natural continuation of family reciprocity.

In many Asian cultures, supporting parents financially is tied to filial piety, the idea that adult children owe respect and care to aging parents.

Researchers describe filial piety as a moral obligation in which children are expected to help support parents in later life, especially where retirement systems are weaker or family support has historically filled the gap.

Yet cultural expectation does not automatically settle the fairness question. Even within cultures that value family obligation, there is often an unspoken distinction between supporting a need and funding a preference.

The mother is not asking for emergency help after financial hardship. She has assets, rental income, and a spouse with retirement support.

That changes how many people interpret the request. A duty rooted in survival may feel different from one tied to maintaining a lifestyle.

This broader issue reflects what experts sometimes call the “sandwich generation” problem, adults simultaneously supporting children while also helping aging parents. Financial strain grows quickly when responsibilities multiply.

A recent Kiplinger report on caregiving pressures notes that many adults caring for aging parents already face emotional and financial stress while raising children and maintaining households of their own. The tension often worsens when family expectations are unclear or unevenly distributed.

Family therapist and author Dr. John Townsend, known for his work on interpersonal boundaries, has argued that healthy family relationships require balancing generosity with limits: “We are responsible to people, not for people.” While not specific to parent-child finances, the idea feels relevant here. Supporting family can be loving and culturally meaningful, but obligation without limits can easily breed resentment rather than closeness.

At the same time, dismissing the mother as simply “greedy” may oversimplify things. Aging can trigger anxiety about independence, especially for parents who fear becoming financially vulnerable later in life.

Her insistence that “$300 is not much” may reflect genuine concern about future security, even if the request feels tone-deaf to her children’s realities. Parents and adult children often see the same financial situation through completely different emotional lenses.

For OP, the neutral middle ground may be a conversation about boundaries rather than outright refusal or reluctant compliance. Instead of accepting a fixed monthly demand, they might ask practical questions:

What exactly is the money for? Is there a retirement shortfall? Would occasional help during emergencies feel more manageable? Perhaps support could come in ways that do not compromise raising young families.

At its core, this story highlights a difficult truth about adulthood in many families: love and duty do not always come with the same price tag.

Through OP’s experience, the real challenge becomes figuring out how to honor family values without sacrificing financial stability, personal boundaries, or the next generation already depending on them.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

These Redditors firmly backed the OP, saying a parent’s retirement is their own responsibility, not a bill to hand off to adult children.

Flat-Replacement4828 − NTA. HELL no. Her retirement is her own responsibility.

All the money she spent on your CHILDHOOD was also her responsibility. Nope nope nope.

Competitive-Fox3556 − I stopped reading after the first paragraph. NTA. Your mother should have planned her own retirement.

It’s not your duty to give her a dime unless YOU want to.

CommercialQueasy538 − NTA, why on earth is her retirement your responsibility?

It is pure greed and if she tries to hold that over you, then she’s putting money before a relationship with her children

Youmadashell − NTA, why are you entertaining this? Her sending you to private school has nothing to do with anything lol.

SeveralMarionberry42 − NTA. She chose to have children and she made the choice to send you to private school.

Similarly, you can’t give someone $100 for their birthday and then come back 10 years later saying it was a loan and you owe me that money + interest.

Unless an agreement has been made beforehand you cannot claim duty or responsibility for any kind of arrangement.

She does not have the right to decide what your money should go to.

This group cheered OP on for prioritizing their own family, arguing that the $300 monthly payment should go toward raising children and building financial stability, not funding a parent who already has income.

MakeYourPoint23 − NTA. That $300 a month? You should be putting that toward your own retirement, not hers!

ambientfruit − Your mum isn't starving. She has rental income. That is her retirement. What she wants is a lavish retirement.

You don't owe her a lavish retirement. You owe yourself a good life. NTA.

Alive_Revenue_4212 − NTA. Like you said you don't live with her and have your own children to take care of.

You are not obligated to send your parents money just because they're your parents.

Inner_Gold_7463 − You answered your own question, "I told her I would never tax my kids like this while they’re trying to build their lives." NTA.

These commenters did not hold back, roasting the request as greedy and over-the-top.

LuxLo11 − Ah. The narcissistic ‘I chose to have you and raise you all so now I’m your responsibility’ parent tax at $900 a month?

While she owns multiple properties? And you mentioned renting?!

I would have loled my ass out of there. Time to go low or no contact. The tears, guilt tripping and make-believe financial illiteracy will come next.

rp55395 − NTA. A $3600 a year tax just for her to be a part of your life?

Put it in a savings account and let her know that you will pay her funeral expenses with it.

Geeezzzz-Louise − I can’t believe you are even considering this….

Dear_Reflection2874 − NTA. I thought when I saw the title that the three of you lived at home.

All of you are out on your own with families of your own. You do not owe your mother anything.

These users offered a more nuanced take, acknowledging that cultural expectations around supporting parents can differ.

Rayearth_XIII − NTA. But be prepared for this to cause rifts in your family.

Not just between you and your mom, but potentially between you and your siblings. How do they feel about this “duty”?

Frankly, it sounds ridiculous on the face of it, but I don’t know if there are any cultural underpinnings to her request.

That wouldn’t change my judgment, though, asking each of you for 30% of the average worker’s monthly income each, while also earning other passive income, smells of greed and a...

BowTrek − Your mom makes more than you? Yeah if she doesn’t need it then I wouldn’t send it, not when you have kids.

And her spending money to send you to private school has nothing to do with you owing her now.

She did what she thought was best for her children. Note that I’m from the US. Other cultures are different. NTA.

The Redditor found themselves stuck between cultural expectations, financial reality, and what feels fair in modern family life.

While many sympathized with the pressure of supporting parents in Asian households, others pointed out that the mom already earns rental income and is asking for a fixed monthly payment from adult children who are raising families of their own.

Some felt helping occasionally is different from being handed a lifelong bill. Was the Redditor being selfish, or is it reasonable to draw boundaries when money is already tight? Share your hot takes 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%

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Hello, lovely readers! I’m Marry Anna, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. As a woman over 30, I bring my curiosity and a background in Creative Writing to every piece I create. My mission is to spark joy and thought through stories, whether I’m covering quirky food trends, diving into self-care routines, or unpacking the beauty of human connections. From articles on sustainable living to heartfelt takes on modern relationships, I love adding a warm, relatable voice to my work. Outside of writing, I’m probably hunting for vintage treasures, enjoying a glass of red wine, or hiking with my dog under the open sky.

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