What would you do if the money you carefully saved for your niece’s education suddenly vanished only to find out it went toward her prom night? One Redditor recently discovered her sister had raided the $11,000 college fund she’d been contributing to for years, draining nearly $7,000 for dresses, limos, and a glamorous evening.
When the sister asked for a $2,000 “loan” to rebuild the fund, the aunt finally drew the line. Instead of sympathy, she got labeled selfish, cold, and unsupportive by family members who thought prom was a once-in-a-lifetime priority. Was this tough love or financial betrayal? Let’s dive into the saga.
A woman refuses to loan her sister $2,000 to replenish their niece’s college fund after the sister spent $7,000 of it on prom without permission



Boundaries around money are already difficult in families, but when trust is broken, the fallout often cuts deeper than the missing dollars. Here, OP thought she was building a safety net for her niece’s education. Instead, she discovered that $7,000, more than half the fund, was spent on a single night of high school glamour.
From the sister’s perspective, prom felt like a “once in a lifetime” rite of passage. Sociologists note that milestone events, such as proms and graduations, often carry symbolic weight in families that have faced hardship.
According to a 2014 report by the Journal of Adolescent Research, parents under financial or emotional stress may “prioritize symbolic consumption that signifies normalcy for their children, even at the expense of long-term stability”. So spending big on prom can feel like a way to give their child “what everyone else has.”
But the brutal math is unavoidable. A 2023 national survey by Student Loan Hero found that the average American family spends $1,000–$1,600 on prom, depending on region. Even at the high end, the figure is nowhere near $7,000. That discrepancy fuels suspicion among Redditors that at least some of the money was diverted elsewhere.
Financial experts are blunt on this point. Certified financial planner Shannah Game told CNBC that “college funds should never double as discretionary spending accounts. Once trust is broken, the donor should redirect contributions into accounts that bypass the parent and go directly to the student or institution”.
This advice is particularly relevant here: OP’s instinct to pause contributions until her niece is older or to handle payments directly with the college, aligns with professional best practices.
Emotionally, the niece is caught in the middle. Research published in Family Relations highlights how intergenerational conflict around finances often burdens adolescents with guilt, even when they are not responsible for the money’s mismanagement.
OP did the right thing by reassuring her niece that the argument is not her fault. Supporting her in applying for scholarships or mentoring her through financial literacy could be a more meaningful gift than another deposit into a leaky fund.
So, what should OP do now? Keep boundaries firm with her sister, while keeping compassion open for her niece. Declining to “refill” the drained account isn’t cruelty, it’s a safeguard against repeat betrayal. Offering future help directly, or guiding her niece toward sustainable resources, ensures the original spirit of generosity survives, even if the trust with her sister does not.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
Some commenters all suspected the $7,000 wasn’t just for prom, urging OP to demand receipts and warning that her sister may have siphoned money for herself


These Reddit users told her to protect future contributions by opening an account solely in her name and, if possible, give money directly to the niece not the sister



This group scoffed at the idea of prioritizing prom over education, calling the spending “ridiculous” and pointing out that even extravagant proms rarely exceed $2,500

Some argued this was a hard but necessary lesson for the sister, boundaries matter, even when family plays the guilt card

The aunt’s decision to say no may feel harsh, but it sends a clear message: education isn’t optional, and neither are boundaries.
So what do you think? Was the aunt right to slam the brakes on her sister’s request, or should she have put family harmony over financial principles? And more importantly, how would you protect savings meant for a loved one when trust has already been broken?









