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Parents Hide A $3,000 Child Support Windfall From Their Adult Son, Were They Wrong?

by Marry Anna
October 20, 2025
in Social Issues

Money can complicate even the strongest family bonds, especially when it’s tied to painful memories and old wounds. What feels like fairness to one person can seem like betrayal to another, and honesty doesn’t always guarantee peace.

That’s exactly the dilemma one couple faced after unexpectedly receiving a long-overdue child support payment for their now-adult son.

Torn between transparency and self-preservation, they debated whether to quietly pass along the money without revealing its source.

But is withholding the truth a form of protection, or deception?

Parents Hide A $3,000 Child Support Windfall From Their Adult Son, Were They Wrong?
Not the actual photo

'AITAH giving our son child support money but not telling him where it came from?'

My wife and I have been married for 14 years. When we met, she already had an 11-year-old son who is now 25.

He has started his own family, lives on his own. Has given us 2 grandkids. We married within a year, moved out, and raised him together.

His father was never in the picture, he was in and out of jail and was physically abusive to both my son and my wife so he had no custody...

Once every few years, we’d receive a check for a few hundred dollars. We’d give some to our son and use the rest towards bills.

To this day he owes well over a 50k. Today, to our surprise, we received a payment for $3000.

My wife wants to give our son half, but we both know that our son will not only insist on the full amount being given to him, he’ll get very...

His wife, knowing her for many years, will likely also tell him he deserves all of it. I believe my wife is entitled to at least half for obvious reasons.

We are considering giving him the money but not telling him where it came from. AITAH?

Money rarely stays just money when families are involved. In this Reddit situation, a married couple unexpectedly receives a $3,000 payment from the wife’s ex, the father of her child, decades overdue.

The adult child, now 25, is being positioned to receive that money, yet the parents feel entitled to keep part of it themselves. The question isn’t just “who should get the cash?” but “what does the cash represent?”

Psychological insight offers some clarity. In Why Are We So Emotional About Money? the authors write:“Money touches deep-rooted feelings of fairness, identity, and family allegiance.”

Here the payment isn’t merely financial, it symbolizes years of absence, responsibility, and emotional cost. Family studies reinforce how financing and disclosure link with trust.

For instance, a study titled Revealing and Concealing Financial Information in Families documented that open financial communication correlates with stronger personal and relational outcomes, while secrecy erodes autonomy and trust.

Meanwhile a survey by NerdWallet found “39% of Americans report they’ve withheld financial information from their parents,” and that most adults believe parents should be transparent with adult children.

Applying these insights, if the parents choose to keep the origin of the payment hidden, they risk undermining trust. The money may feel rightfully theirs (for years of care, risk and emotional labour) but to the son it may feel like rightful restitution for his absence and hardship.

The ethics rest in transparency with context, not opacity.

The parents shoul set aside time to explain clearly, this payment came from the biological father’s past support debt; it represents a long-delayed accounting.

Let’s discuss how we proceed as a family (shared or individual) in a way that respects everyone’s contributions and feelings. That approach recognizes the emotional ledger behind the money.

At its core, this isn’t just about $3,000, it’s about how families reconcile money with memory, responsibility with resentment, and legacy with respect.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

These Redditors backed the parents, insisting the funds were reimbursement, not a payday.

Senior_Shelter9121 − That money is to pay back his mother for childhood expenses she accrued. Not for the son.

tootall777 − Your son isn't legally entitled to any of it. Your wife is the person entitled to it.

Child support is meant to reimburse the parent for the cost of raising a child. If you and your wife chose to give any portion to your son, it would...

You could possibly sock the funds, or part of the funds, away in a separate account and use them later to help him with a down payment on a house...

Your son also doesn't need to know that you have this separate account or that you've been receiving back child support payments.

It is quite possible you will receive additional payments in the future, too. Edited to add this is for the US and for a few grammatical errors.

GalacticCmdr − NTA. Child support payments are what they are named on the tin.

They are not for the child, but to help cover the costs one party incurs to raise the child.

In this case 100% of the child support payments belong to the mom, who is the party on the divorce decree.

StarsBear75063 − "I believe my wife is entitled to at least half for obvious reasons."

You are absolutely 100% true. She IS entitled to half of it. And the other half, as well.

Tiny-Relative8415 − Your son has no entitlement to that money. Child support means money going for support of the child.

Food, Clothing, shelter, dental, medical, and any extra curricular activities that comes from raising children.

Your ex owes you 50,000 back pay from all of that. I would keep that money and invest it into your grandchildren’s college funds.

Antique_Elk7826 − NTA. Your wife (and by extension you as well) is entitled to the child support as the person who raised him.

If you must tell him, then explain that by law child support is never owed to the child, always to the parent and if he complains about how much you...

And by you obviously I mean your wife should be the one explaining this as the mom in this situation.

[Reddit User] − It’s child support. Not child allowance.

Remarkable-Cry7123 − That support was to raise the child. Food, housing, clothing.

It’s was never intended for kids to spend. It’s your wife’s money. She did the raising.

Other commenters criticized the son’s entitled behavior and immaturity.

ProfessorDistinct835 − Your son sounds like kind of a d__k if he'd really expect that money at 25. Just keep the money.

You were clearly out close to $50,000 in funds that could have helped with his upbringing. Problem solved. NTA.

Alternative_Squash61 − What a shame. He made it to 25, but never grew up.

nikki57 − You and his mom covered the costs for his dad growing up, this money pays you two back.

She is entitled to 100% of it. How did you guys raise someone so entitled they'd want money that's owed to your wife to cover expenses she's already paid for.

It's really nice to want to give him half, but I absolutely wouldn't bring it up at all if he's going to act like a spoiled brat about a generous...

He's not entitled to this money, at all.

LiliAtReddit − I’m the kid of divorced parents. Whatever little my Mom got from my bio-dad, it went toward housing, food, medical, never would I have expected any of it.

eThotExpress − If my dead beat father EVER pays the 18k+ he owes in child support I would not be hounding my mom for even a piece of it.

I’m not entitled to that money, it was payback for her raising me and paying for me ALONE.

Raising children costs money. His father didn’t do his part and that’s why he owes his mother child support.

Not the child. If you want to give him half do that, but don’t say it came from child support. Maybe Ma got lucky on a scratcher ticket, who knows?...

A few responses brought an emotional edge to the discussion.

bbbbears − My dad was an abusive piece of s__t. Once while I was on visitation with him for the weekend, he asked if I got his child support payment,...

He encouraged me to ask her wtf that was about and why don’t I get the money?? Keep in mind I was like 8 years old.

So I go home and ask my mom about it and she’s f__king furious at my dad, not me thankfully, but I felt so dumb as she explained to me...

All that to say, yeah, it’s money for you to raise the child.

heneryhawkleghorn − Over the years, you and your wife are the ones who made the sacrifices to raise him without the child support you were owed... Not your son.

You should be reimbursed, not him. You and your wife are entitled to the whole thing, not half. NTA even if you give him nothing.

Money tied to painful history always comes with emotional interest. Is it wrong to spare someone pain if it means bending honesty a bit?

Was the couple right to quietly share the child support windfall, or did secrecy taint an act of love? Drop your thoughts below, this one’s messy.

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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