Boyfriend Wants Her To Move In To Help Pay His Debt, But She Feels Like She’ll Be His Financial Support

Relationships can sometimes feel like a partnership in every sense, but when financial struggles come into play, things can get complicated.

That’s what one woman is experiencing after her boyfriend, who has been financially struggling for years, suggested she move in with him to help pay off his growing debt.

While he has significant investments in crypto, he refuses to touch them, relying instead on extra work hours and expecting her to move in and help cover expenses, including renting out her properties on Airbnb.

The woman feels uneasy about the idea, especially since she would be taking on extra responsibilities.

Boyfriend Wants Her To Move In To Help Pay His Debt, But She Feels Like She’ll Be His Financial Support
Not the actual photo

'Boyfriend wants to move in to pay off debt?'

I'll try to make it short. Been together for 4 years and he's always financially struggling despite having $250k sitting

in crypto that he won't touch until the next" bull run". We have great chemistry, but I have way more than him financially.

He's always crying about debt and not having enough money and wanting a change for his life, but the only change

that he has made is working extra hours at work while I'm doing multiple things to gain income, not including my job.

When I met him, he was $25k in debt, and now he's $50k in debt and says he wants me to move in with him to help pay down his...

He says he wants to pay it all off in a year, and when I ask him what his game plan is, he says it's me moving in to save...

He has a son, and most recently, when I've gone over to his house, it's messy and cluttered, and he says it's because he is so busy working and he...

I have a son too, but I have a feeling this is going to greatly benefit him as he'll have live-in help to cook and clean while also paying his...

He makes $5k more than I yearly and says that when I move in, we'll live off one income, and I'm like, how when you're barely making yours on your...

I live very comfortably because I live below my means, and before he realized he was in so much debt,

there were Amazon packages and purchases made just because they were on sale or it was something he absolutely had to have.

I'm 41F, and he's 36M. I want to break up at this point because all I see for my future is helping him, struggling,

and no real benefit here for me in the long run. What do you guys think?

This situation isn’t simply about one partner wanting help with debt, it reflects deeper issues around financial responsibility, compatibility, and how partners handle stress and conflict together.

Money isn’t just currency in a relationship; it’s a reflection of values, trust, and mutual planning. When partners differ significantly in how they make financial decisions, it often leads to ongoing conflict and dissatisfaction.

Disagreements about spending, saving, debt, and financial goals are well‑documented as a major source of tension in relationships and one of the most common triggers of long‑term conflict between couples.

In fact, conflict over money is often cited as a leading cause of relationship stress and divorce when partners don’t align on financial priorities and planning.

Financial compatibility, not just chemistry, matters. Couples who share financial goals, values, and approaches to money tend to report higher satisfaction in their relationships, while mismatches in financial management styles predict more conflict.

A study of couples’ financial roles found that satisfaction with shared financial responsibilities and agreement on financial goals was strongly associated with overall relationship satisfaction.

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Another layer in this story involves the boyfriend’s relationship with money and how certain cognitive and emotional factors can influence financial decision‑making.

Adults with symptoms of ADHD, especially impulsivity, inattention, and difficulty with planning, have been shown to experience challenges with financial decisions, including higher rates of impulsive buying, trouble saving, and more frequent use of spontaneous or avoidant decision styles.

This isn’t a moral judgment; it’s a pattern identified in research comparing financial decision‑making between adults with and without ADHD symptoms.

Such tendencies can make managing debt and budgeting more difficult, especially without structured strategies to support planning, tracking, and prioritizing financial goals.

This backdrop helps explain why the boyfriend’s plan, relying on the OP’s move‑in and Airbnb income to solve his mounting debt without touching his crypto, feels unbalanced.

Rather than addressing underlying habits and decision processes, the strategy places the burden on the OP to solve his financial problems.

Relationships thrive when partners work together toward shared goals, not when one partner is expected to absorb the other’s responsibilities without reciprocal effort or accountability.

Financial strain does more than stress household budgets: it’s closely tied to emotional distress and mental health challenges.

Research shows that individuals in financial difficulty often experience increased anxiety, stress, and decreased mental well‑being, and that poor financial outcomes can contribute to ongoing psychological strain.

When financial stress accumulates without clear communication or shared solutions, the emotional cost can spill over into relationship dynamics.

Communication research supports this: the way couples talk about money, including honest discussions about debt, spending priorities, and financial habits, is often more predictive of relationship health than the specific dollar amounts involved.

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Successfully navigating money conflicts involves not only shared goals but also mutual respect for each other’s contributions and limitations, and willingness to plan collaboratively rather than assign blame.

Viewed through this lens, the OP’s concerns are valid and grounded in long‑term wellbeing, not short‑sightedness.

Financial health in a relationship isn’t just about having assets or income; it’s about building a shared plan that both partners commit to and can realistically achieve together.

When one partner’s behavior repeatedly undermines progress, even unconsciously, it can erode trust and signal deeper incompatibilities.

The OP’s instinct to reconsider the future of the relationship reflects awareness of this imbalance.

A healthy partnership ideally involves shared responsibility for financial decisions, mutual accountability for debts and savings, and a cooperative approach to building a stable life together.

When those elements are absent, staying in the relationship may mean absorbing stress and financial burden without shared benefit, a dynamic that rarely leads to long‑term satisfaction.

In summary: financial disagreements aren’t just about numbers, they’re about values, shared goals, mutual effort, and respect.

Successful relationships integrate financial planning into their communication and partnership, rather than relegating one partner to financial rescue while the other avoids changing established behaviors.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

These commenters see the situation as one-sided, with the boyfriend seeking to use OP’s resources to fix his own financial mess.

Samwry − NTJ. He sounds like a budding hobosexual.

If he is foolish enough to keep paying debts when he can cash in some of his crypto, well, that is not your problem.

It is a HIM problem. He seems financially illiterate, which is NOT good in a life partner.

Notice he doesn't say anything about what would be good for you, only for him.

Plus, he has a kid in tow. You can do better.

CaptainSnappertain − He's lying about having a bunch of money in crypto (or anywhere else for that matter). Dump him.

Outrageous_Rabbit842 − Oh, please break up with him. He’s only going deeper into debt, and his solution is to make

you support him and contribute to paying down a debt he will likely keep increasing! You deserve so much better, NTJ.

Top-Bit85 − Oh come on. You know he wants you to move in and pay all the bills, do all the housework, and probably care for his son.

He thinks he hit the Lottery. Don't do it.

These users are vocal about the red flags, with many calling out the boyfriend’s plan as an attempt to use OP’s assets and take advantage of her generosity.

warmymallow − This really sounds less like a partnership plan and more like you being asked to subsidize someone else’s financial situation and lifestyle.

Steups13 − No. He can move in with his parents and save. Why should your bills increase to supplement his poor choices?

PolkaDotDancer − Oh, hell no! He wants to use your assets to pay his debts. He wants you to be a free maid. Don't move in with this loser! NTJ.

Impossible_Dentist79 − He keeps saying that by me moving in, it will cut my bills, and the money from renting out

my homes will go to me and in turn, help him because he gets some help because I'll pay the small bills like light,

water and wifi and he'll pay the big bills like his mortgage which is 1k more than mine.

He says we're building a life together, and after he pays off his debt, we can start buying homes together as rental

properties once he gets his financial situation together. That's the master plan.

He's sold it to me as if once he gets out of debt, he'll be more able to support us financially on his own,

and I can quit my job because we'll live on the rental income. Not to mention he's gained 50lbs and is not as attractive as he used to be.

When I ask him to work out, he says I need to work out with him to help motivate him.

I'm just seeing him as weak now because if he can't even motivate himself not to look like a meatball, how will he motivate me?

thickerthanastallion − YES, leave 3 years ago.

These commenters highlight the potential long-term consequences of moving in with someone who can’t manage his debt or finances.

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ima_steal_ur_kid − First off, he should just use his crypto money. If he pays off his debt, he'll still have more than enough.

Second, you are completely NTJ for wanting to break up. You want a comfortable future, and he can't contribute to that

unless he grows up and takes action to make his financial position better than it is now.

Break up if he can't understand your point of view and pushes back.

TrueCrimeInTheBuff − My mom fell for this hobosexual usery b__lshit twice and both men bankrupted her after turning her in to their mommybangmaid.

Neither helped her financially, and both let her lose her home. Thankfully, she got herself respect together and dropped men like that.

SouthernAge522 − Debt aside, if you're not ready to move in after 4 years, chances are you never will be.

Traditional-Ad2319 − Do not move in with him. He will ruin you financially.

If he can't control his debt now, he certainly isn't going to get any better at it when she moves in.

The next thing you know, you're going to be paying for this, that, and the other thing, and you're going to be screwed financially.

He's trying to use you by having you move in so he can learn to live off of you, and you can pay off his debt.

I don't think that sounds like a very good plan for you anyway.

theawesomepurple − You are his plan. To the detriment of your health and future, and your child's future stability for your child.

If his debt has doubled in recent years despite earning what you earn, then he’s clearly mismanaging his income.

Get him to have some structured debt advice, and they can help him make big changes.

His moving you in only benefits him unless he’s the light of your world. I’d refuse to blend families.

Not in your or your child’s best interests. Help him with a debt plan. Offer to help him in other ways, but not financially.

This is a man beginning to drown, using others as a life raft whilst drowning them. No.

AutomaticTap310 − NTJ, his plans heavily favor him at your expense. He has the means, but he is just choosing not to use them.

Real adults in his situation would cash out enough to pay off his debts and then rearrange his living situation to fit his actual budget, not his aspiring budget.

The community overwhelmingly agrees that OP should not move in with this guy, especially given his financial habits and unrealistic expectations.

Do you think OP should walk away, or is there a way to salvage the relationship without jeopardizing her future? Share your hot takes below!

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