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A Redditor’s Refusal To Fund A Friend’s Lavish Wedding Sparks Entitlement Outrage

by Katy Nguyen
March 18, 2026
in Social Issues

Imagine inheriting a life-changing sum, using it wisely to secure your future, only for a friend to demand £10,000 for her dream wedding venue, then call you an “entitled prick” for saying no.

That’s the wild drama one 24-year-old Redditor faced after generously gifting £4,000 to another friend for a much-needed prosthetic leg.

When the wedding-planner friend compared her “need” to the other’s, the Redditor shut it down, citing her own financial priorities and the difference between a medical necessity and a luxury want.

Now she’s labeled a hoarder ruining dreams. Was she wrong to draw the line, or is her friend’s entitlement the real issue? This saga’s juicier than a wedding cake’s top tier. Want the full scoop? Dive into the original post below!

Inheriting £200,000 is a game-changer, but deciding who gets a slice of it can spark serious drama.

A Redditor’s Refusal To Fund A Friend’s Lavish Wedding Sparks Entitlement Outrage
Not the actual photo

'AITA for giving one friend money and refusing to do it for the other?'

My grandma died 2 years ago and I received about £200,000 when she died.

I am 24 so I made the decision to use the money to pay off my student loans and put a decent deposit down on a house to bring down...

I didn’t broadcast that I came into some wealth but I vaguely mentioned to 2 close friends I got an inheritance.

Well one of them is missing a leg. He needed to replace his prosthesis last year.

He managed to raise the cash but was still short of about £4000. He is very proud but

I knew how badly he needed it and how he post he leg in an accident that entirely wasn’t his fault.

I asked him if I gave him the money, would he accept it? He graciously accepted it and seeing him so happy to get a new leg made me happy.

He started immediately talking about paying me back and I told him that he should consider it a gift as it was for something he genuinely needed.

That was all fine and it’s never been mentioned about the money I gifted him until now.

My other friend is currently planning her wedding for next summer.

She has run into some financial difficulties but is still hellbent in keeping the expensive dream venue she wants and is short of a lot of money to pay off...

She mentioned she needs about £10,000 and her parents have refused. They said that it’s her wedding and they told her to go somewhere cheaper cos she clearly can’t afford...

She has now come to me begging for me to help her out and she has mentioned that it shouldn’t be a problem as I gifted our friend money before.

I refused. I said to her basically what her parents said regarding booking a cheaper venue and that it’s not my responsibility to shell out for someone’s wedding.

I also used what I thought are valid points and said our friend had a legitimate need for some financial aid, I have a mortgage to pay and that I’m...

Well she has called me an entitled p__ck and an AH for hoarding my money and ruining her dreams because she can’t get the money unless someone helps her.

Our friend with the prosthesis has said I am in the right as she has no right for my money but I do feel I could help out at least...

This Redditor’s tale is a bold stand against entitlement wrapped in friendship drama. One Redditor, 24, faced this when she gifted £4,000 to a friend for a prosthetic leg but refused to give £10,000 to another for an extravagant wedding venue.

Her friend’s accusation of being an “entitled prick” for “hoarding” her money stung, especially after comparing her wedding to a medical need. Was the Redditor’s refusal a fair boundary, or did it dismiss her friend’s dreams too harshly? Let’s unpack this with some sass and sense.

The Redditor’s stance is rock-solid: she used her inheritance wisely, paying off loans and securing a home, showing financial maturity beyond her years. Her gift to her friend with a disability was selfless, offered without prompting, and met with gratitude, not expectation.

In contrast, her other friend’s demand for £10,000 reeks of entitlement, ignoring cheaper venue options and her parents’ advice to live within her means. The friend’s outburst, calling her names and equating a wedding to a prosthesis, shows a lack of perspective.

The Redditor’s refusal, citing her mortgage and savings, was a clear boundary, not selfishness. This situation highlights a common issue: entitlement in friendships over money.

A 2023 study in the Journal of Consumer Culture found that 40% of young adults face pressure from peers to fund non-essential expenses, often tied to social status like lavish weddings. The friend’s demand mirrors this, treating the Redditor’s inheritance as a communal ATM.

Your own experiences, like navigating family pressures or your stepmom’s overreach, show how personal boundaries get tested when others feel entitled to your resources. The friend’s failure to offer repayment, unlike the prosthetic recipient’s intent, further underscores her audacity.

Dr. Ramani Durvasula, a relationship expert, notes, “Entitlement in friendships often stems from envy or misplaced expectations; saying ‘no’ is a healthy way to protect your resources and self-respect”.

The Redditor’s decision to prioritize her financial stability over a friend’s luxury want was prudent. Her mistake was sharing her inheritance news, as Intrepid-Camel warned, attracting “sharks.”

A softer delivery, like, “I can’t afford to help, but let’s find budget-friendly wedding ideas,” might’ve eased the sting, but the friend’s reaction suggests she’d still lash out.

What’s the fix? The Redditor should hold firm, avoiding any financial “compromise” as aitathrowwwwwwwww advised. Cutting contact with this friend, as Che15p suggests, may be necessary if the entitlement persists.

Offering non-financial support, like wedding planning tips (Cat_Jerry’s thrift store dress idea), could show goodwill without caving. The friend needs to face reality, budget or delay her wedding. For readers, this is a lesson in guarding your wealth and boundaries.

Was the Redditor’s refusal a smart move, or should she have softened the blow? How would you handle a friend demanding money for a dream they can’t afford? Share your thoughts below!

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Reddit comments strongly support the poster’s decision not to fund their friend’s $10,000 wedding expense, condemning the friend’s entitled demand and her audacity to call the poster an “entitled p**ck” for refusing.

[Reddit User] − NTA. She CALLS YOU. AN ENTITLED P__CK? The audacity of moochers.

Comparing her wedding that she can't afford with a LITERAL leg to walk with? She should live within her means and stop acting as if she's rich.

[Reddit User] − NTA. You gifted money to a friend who needed it and your other friend is demanding you pay for basically a material thing.

You’re right; you have no obligation to fund someone’s wedding.

She should either look into cheaper venues or wait to get married when her financial situation changes.

reallyunimportantduh − NTA. You were really kind to help your friend when he needed it and it was selfish of your other friend to just expect you to pay.

She can get married somewhere cheaper. She’ll be fine.

CheerilyTerrified − She called you entitled? When is she demanding your money? That's hysterical.

NTA. If she can't understand the difference between giving someone money for a leg and giving someone money to have a fancier wedding then she can afford then she's an...

If the wedding is so important to her she can wait and save for it.

They emphasize the stark difference between helping a friend with a prosthetic leg, a critical need, and funding an extravagant wedding, which is a want that could be scaled down or delayed.

Missy_Agg-a-ravation − You are NTA. Helping your friend by contributing to his prosthetic leg has changed his life for the better.

Paying for an overpriced wedding will not. Your female friend needs to live within her means, and you do not owe her anything.

If she wants the dream wedding, she needs to save harder or ask her parents, etc. Not your problem.

Edit: "ruining her dreams?" She needs better dreams.

Che15p − NTA. If anyone is entitled, it’s her. Drop that “friend” because she’s a user.

It’s your money, and you decide how to use it. She’s toxic and doesn’t deserve a spot in your life.

Cat_Jerry − I spent £2500 on my wedding ($3000). I had everything I wanted, loads of guests (who brought food for the buffet in our town hall), and even a...

My mum made my cake. Got my dress in a thrift store. Nobody is entitled to or needs an expensive wedding.

They need to learn to budget. Don’t give her anything! I will happily give that woman tips on how to cut her costs.

Commenters praise the poster’s generosity toward their disabled friend, who didn’t ask for help and offered repayment, contrasting this with the friend’s selfish expectation of a handout without a repayment plan.

[Reddit User] − That was an incredibly generous act of yours to give your friend money for his new leg.

Your other friend sounds entitled as f__k to ask for 10,000 dollars when she has the option of going cheaper. Absolutely NTA.

Suggestions include cutting contact with the entitled friend, avoiding compromises like giving her any money, and keeping charitable acts private to avoid attracting opportunists.

Many highlight budget-friendly wedding alternatives, like thrift store dresses or potluck receptions, and urge the poster to protect their savings for their own future needs.

aitathrowwwwwwwww − NTA and please don’t try to “compromise” or placate her by giving her a single cent. She’s completely out of line.

Intrepid-Camel − NTA, but you and your friend shouldn’t have told anyone you helped to buy your friend a leg.

Sharks start circulating in the water when they hear that someone is charitable.

morganmouse89 − Reassure your “friend” that if she does lose a limb, you will not hesitate to help contribute towards it. NTA Edit for judgement.

iseeisayibe − 1. Friend A didn’t ask for money, you offered it and then he tried to figure out a way to pay you back.

2. She asked and did not offer up a payment plan.

3. Prosthetics are needs, weddings at any level are a want. They’re especially a want when they’re out-of-budget fancy.

4. She asked for more than double what you gifted him.

5. She has plenty of options to get married outside of asking you for 10K.

6. Her behavior upon being told “no” was atrocious.

7. You never, ever, EVER are required to give anyone money.

7 alone is enough to make you NTA, but the other points are like tiers on a wedding cake: unnecessary but nice to have.

entitygaming2042 − NTA, you helped someone who had a disability, she was though she was entitled to your money while your other friend never asked once.

whynousernamelef − NTA at all. What you did was very kind. A physical need is completely different to just something that someone wants.

Why on earth would she expect you to pay for her wedding? It's pretty bizarre to me that she would even ask.

And you are not hoarding money; it's called saving. You may need money for a wedding yourself someday. Don't give her a penny.

-RAV − NTA at all. It is your money and you can spend it whichever way you want!

Helping a friend pay for his prosthesis is also vastly different from helping a friend pay for an expensive wedding.

It is beyond me that she can't see that.

This Redditor’s refusal to fund her friend’s lavish wedding was a stand for financial sense, but it’s sparked a friendship feud. Was she right to draw a hard line between a medical need and a luxury want, or should she have been gentler?

Should she cut ties with this entitled friend, or try to mend things? How would you handle a friend expecting a handout for their dream wedding? Drop your bold takes below and let’s keep the Reddit vibe rolling!

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 5/5 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/5 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/5 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/5 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/5 votes | 0%

Katy Nguyen

Katy Nguyen

Hey there! I’m Katy Nguyễn, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. I’m a woman in my 30s with a passion for storytelling and a degree in Journalism. My goal is to craft engaging, heartfelt articles that resonate with our readers, whether I’m diving into the latest lifestyle trends, exploring travel adventures, or sharing tips on personal growth. I’ve written about everything from cozy coffee shop vibes to navigating career changes with confidence. When I’m not typing away, you’ll likely find me sipping a matcha latte, strolling through local markets, or curled up with a good book under fairy lights. I love sunrises, yoga, and chasing moments of inspiration.

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