Her Dad Asked For Her Social Security Number. Given Their History, She Didn’t Even Hesitate

Some requests don’t need a long explanation. They just feel wrong the moment you hear them.

For one 28-year-old woman, that moment came when her estranged father texted her out of the blue asking for her Social Security number.

Not for paperwork she could verify. Not for something she could be involved in directly.

Just… to “clear some debt.”

On its own, that might already sound questionable. But this wasn’t happening in a vacuum.

Her Dad Asked for Her Social Security Number. Given Their History, She Didn’t Even Hesitate
Not the actual photo

This was a man who had already used her identity before.

'AITA For not giving my dad my social security number?'

My dad (58M) and I (28F) have always had a rocky relationship. He struggled with addiction when I was growing up, and I’ve been on my own since I was...

He’s also lied and taken advantage of me financially in the past, putting cars and utility bills in my name without my knowledge, which left me thousands in debt.

We barely talk now. I usually just get a text on major holidays. Late last week, he reached out asking for my Social Security number, claiming he needs it to...

He said he only needs it from one of my brothers and me (he has 7 kids total and had the rest).

This immediately raised red flags. I was an adult at the time he’s referring to, he’s never claimed me on taxes, and I don’t see why my SSN would have...

I don’t trust him, but I also worry that refusing could completely end whatever relationship we still have.

My mom and boyfriend both think I shouldn’t give it to him, and I agree it doesn’t make sense but part of me wonders if I’m overreacting because of our...

AITA for saying no? And is there any legitimate reason he would need my SSN for this?

ETA My credit IS already locked and has been for about 5 years. He absolutely destroyed my credit while I was a teen and I have spent many many years...

My dad has had addiction and money issues in the past but as far as I know he has overcome those and has been doing well for 3 or 4...

My brother DID give his number to my dad, and is wondering why I will not. (My siblings are much younger than me and never saw the same side of...

I think all of my siblings willingly giving him this info made me wonder if I was too blinded by the past to see that this could be real.

I was never planning on giving the number to him, and was more so just curious if I was being an a__hole for NOT considering it.(Hence my initial AITA question).

I guess I was playing devils advocate to see if there was anything he might actually possibly need my SSN for, or if he was just going back to old...

At the end of the day he is still my father and there is an emotional feeling there for me that sometimes blurs logic and is making me hope for...

but its clear from these comments I was absolutely correct in deciding against giving it to him. I would also like to add if this was a real thing and...

I would be dealing with them directly as I will NEVER make the mistake of letting him know my SS again. (Though I never made the mistake, he had my...

A Past That Doesn’t Stay in the Past

She had been on her own since she was 15.

Her father struggled with addiction during her childhood, and their relationship never fully recovered. Over the years, contact became minimal. A text on holidays. Occasional check-ins. Nothing consistent, nothing reliable.

But the real damage wasn’t just emotional.

At one point, he had put cars and utility bills in her name without her knowledge. The result? Thousands of dollars in debt she had to clean up herself.

That’s not just a bad decision. That’s identity fraud.

And it left a lasting impact. Financially and psychologically.

So when he reached out years later asking for her Social Security number again, it didn’t feel like a neutral request.

It felt familiar.

The Request That Made No Sense

His explanation was vague. He needed her number to “clear some debt.” He mentioned needing it from her and one of her brothers, but not all his children.

That alone raised questions.

Because in normal financial or legal processes, there are very few legitimate reasons someone would need an adult child’s Social Security number to resolve their own debt. Especially if that child hasn’t been claimed as a dependent or directly tied to the obligation.

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Experts, including guidance often referenced by the Federal Trade Commission, consistently warn that Social Security numbers should only be shared in verified, official contexts. Financial institutions don’t ask for someone else’s SSN to settle personal debts.

Which makes the situation pretty clear.

If there isn’t a legitimate reason, there’s usually a dangerous one.

The Emotional Conflict Behind a Logical Answer

Logically, the answer was obvious.

Don’t give him the number.

But emotions don’t always follow logic.

He’s still her father. Even after everything. And that creates a kind of internal conflict that’s hard to explain to people who haven’t lived it.

Part of her wondered if she was overreacting. If maybe he had changed. If maybe this time was different.

Especially since her siblings, who didn’t experience the same version of him growing up, had already given him their information.

That’s the tricky part about family dynamics. Different people can have completely different versions of the same person.

But history matters.

And in this case, her history wasn’t vague or distant. It was specific. It was financial. It was harmful.

Trust, Once Broken, Isn’t Neutral Again

There’s a common idea that people deserve second chances.

And sometimes, they do.

But trust isn’t something you reset with time alone. It’s something that has to be rebuilt, consistently, through actions.

Her father hadn’t done that.

He hadn’t repaired the damage. Hadn’t addressed what he had done. Hadn’t created a new pattern of reliability.

Instead, he came back asking for the exact kind of access that had hurt her before.

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That’s not rebuilding trust.

That’s repeating the setup.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Many people pointed out that there is essentially no legitimate reason for a parent to need an adult child’s Social Security number for personal debt.

Aggressive_Cup8452 − You know already that he's trying to scam you AGAIN. Save the money and hassle and invest in some therapy to deal with all the daddy issues.

Letting him steal your identity AGAIN won't make him love you. It will only financially ruin you AGAIN. YtA for even considering this.

TheLaurenJean − NTA. Do not give it to him. He's gonna steal your identity and saddle you with his debt.

KingBretwald − Never, ever, ever give someone your social security number unless required by law. Lock down your credit immediately with all three credit agencies.

Look at what outstanding debt you have at all three credit agencies.

Report your father for identity theft for "putting cars and utility bills in my name without my knowledge".

That is highly illegal. NTA and take immediate steps to protect yourself.

Others emphasized the history, noting that this wasn’t a hypothetical risk, it had already happened.

DarceysExtensions − NTA. Don’t give it to him and lock your credit with all three credit bureaus.

You can unlock quickly when needed, but having the locks prevents anybody from using your SSN/identity to open accounts fraudulently.

Spirited-Mortgage-86 − Freeze your credit - I fear he is plotting. Some parents are wired wrong and that is not your fault.

KLuisaReddit − No. No. Nopity nope. End of discussion.

Coollogin − NTA. It’s kind of mind blowing that you are even considering this.

Some comments were blunt to the point of harshness, but the core message was consistent.

Technical-Neck7407 − NTA. He’s going to dump his debt on you. He can also open credit cards and take out loans with your SSN.

Don’t do it. If you want to help him, ask him how much he needs, have him give you the bills and pay towards it directly. Never trust someone with...

Fioreborn − NO Do not give that man your SSN. He's already put you thousands in debt, do you want more?!

You also should have reported him for identity theft for getting cars and stuff in YOUR name.

ReliefEmotional2639 − NTA. There’s only one reason why he would need your social security number and that is to scam you.

Sometimes the hardest part of growing up isn’t making decisions.

It’s accepting what those decisions mean.

Saying no to her father isn’t just about protecting her identity. It’s about acknowledging the reality of who he has been in her life.

And that’s not easy.

But boundaries aren’t about punishing someone else.

They’re about finally protecting yourself.

So maybe the real question isn’t whether she’s wrong for saying no.

It’s why saying yes would ever feel like an option at all.

 

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