She’s Thinking Of Saying No To Her Husband Risking His Parents’ Home For A Relative’s Loan, And It’s Turning Into A Serious Marriage Decision

Money has a way of turning even good intentions into high-stakes decisions.

In this case, it started with something that sounds generous on the surface. A young girl, her husband’s niece, has been accepted into colleges in the US. It’s a big opportunity, one that could shape her future. But like many international students, the cost is overwhelming, up to $85,000 a year.

That’s where the request came in.

Her husband’s cousin, the girl’s father, asked if he could help by acting as a guarantor for a loan. Her husband didn’t say yes, but didn’t fully shut it down either. Instead, he offered something that felt like a middle ground.

He would put up collateral.

And not just anything. He planned to use the fully paid-off apartment he bought for his parents.

She’s Thinking of Saying No to Her Husband Risking His Parents’ Home for a Relative’s Loan, and It’s Turning Into a Serious Marriage Decision
Not the actual photo

That’s when everything shifted.

'WIBTA if I put my foot down on husband using a property he owns as collateral for a relative’s loan?'

Husband and I (both 30s) have been married 5+ years and earn decently. He moved here many years ago for higher education but most of his family still lives in...

He has a cousin who he’s very close to. This cousin has a teenage daughter, my husband’s niece, who will be starting college next year.

She has her heart set on studying in the US and has gotten in to schools already.

However, with international tuition, room/board/living expenses, they’re easily looking at $60-85k/year for 4 years.

My husband got the gist that his cousin is not financially prepared for this.

He explained to him how the immigration landscape is changing in the US and landing a job as an immigrant is very difficult right now.

Adding to that, she’s pursuing a bachelor’s degree at a tier 3 college in a major with dwindling entry level jobs due to AI. She can get a better education...

My husband and his cousin had a talk yesterday and cousin apparently asked him if he could sign as guarantor for niece’s education loan.

Husband didn’t give a definite answer but hinted that it’s most likely no. He felt bad about it and said he would be willing to contribute to the collateral.

When he discussed it with me, I asked where the collateral was going to come from. He said he had planned to put the apartment he bought for his parents...

For some context, his parents still live in his home country and he bought them a luxury apartment before we got married.

Here is where the dilemma comes in: when we got married, he was in debt despite being a high earner so a lot of our upfront costs and bills were...

We both eventually got better paying jobs and made other changes that helped us save money,

and he paid off both his debt and the apartment for his parents, but one of the reasons that was possible is due to my savings and added income. Current...

Husband trusts that his cousin will not let it get to a point where he has to end up paying anything

or losing the apartment to the bank and thinks he has other properties that he will sell to cover for the loan if needed.

I feel that his cousin is getting in way over his head and will not be in a position to protect our interests if it ever comes to that point.

What doesn’t add up to me is that he has other properties that would apparently cover the loan, but he isn’t using those as collateral?

And what if he isn’t able to cover it? This apartment is my in-laws’ home and fully paid off, which significantly reduces their living expenses that we pay every month.

If we had to look for a similar apartment in another 4 years, it would be 3x more expensive than the current rate. So WIBTA if I said no to...

Or should I stay out of it since it was bought before we got married and she’s not my direct niece?

When Generosity Starts to Feel Like Risk

On paper, the apartment belongs to him. He bought it before they were married. It’s currently worth around $150,000 and serves as his parents’ home, keeping their living costs low.

But the story doesn’t stop there.

When they first got married, he was in debt. She stepped in. Her savings and income helped stabilize their finances, allowing him to eventually pay off both his debt and the apartment.

So while the property may technically be his, she feels connected to it. Not legally, but practically.

Now, that same asset could be put at risk for a loan that isn’t even theirs.

That’s a very different kind of conversation.

The “What If” That Won’t Go Away

Her husband trusts his cousin. He believes things won’t go wrong. That if needed, the cousin will sell other properties to cover the loan.

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But that’s exactly where her concern lies.

If those other properties exist and can cover the loan, why aren’t they being used as collateral instead?

It raises a question that’s hard to ignore.

Is this really a safe backup plan, or are they being positioned as the safer option for the lender?

Because if anything goes wrong, they’re not just losing money.

They’re risking his parents’ home.

And that’s not something you can easily replace, especially when market prices are rising fast.

A Decision That Affects More Than One Person

What makes this situation heavier is that it’s not just about finances.

It’s about responsibility across multiple layers:

  • His parents, who rely on that apartment
  • His cousin, who wants a better future for his daughter
  • His niece, who may not fully understand the financial risk
  • And their marriage, which now has to absorb the potential fallout

From her perspective, this isn’t just helping family.

It’s taking on a risk that could ripple across everyone’s lives.

And unlike a gift, this isn’t something you can emotionally prepare to lose. It’s tied to security, stability, and long-term planning.

Where Boundaries Matter Most

There’s also a deeper principle at play here.

Financial experts often repeat one simple rule: never risk what you can’t afford to lose.

In this case, the apartment isn’t just an asset. It’s a home. It reduces monthly obligations. It protects his parents’ quality of life.

Losing it wouldn’t just be a financial inconvenience. It would fundamentally change their situation.

That’s why her hesitation isn’t unreasonable.

It’s protective.

Not just of money, but of stability.

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Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Most people strongly agreed that she wouldn’t be wrong to say no. A common theme was that co-signing or putting up collateral for someone else’s loan often ends badly, especially when large sums are involved.

PurpleEmotional1401 − NTA. If husband's niece can get an equally good education in her home country, she or the cousin is just using him as the route to a green...

If the apartment is worth $150k then the country has an economy that can support decent public education.

BinkiesForLife_05 − NTA. Never ever help out with someone else's loan, in any form.

It just leads to people taking advantage and relationships collapsing. It also leads to financial difficulty if that person cannot keep up with payments.

Coolerthanunicorns − YWNBTA. There’s a reason family and money don’t mix. This is a bad idea and a significant amount of money.

Many pointed out the same inconsistency she noticed. If the cousin has other assets, those should be used first. The fact that they aren’t raises legitimate concerns.

lavender_poppy − If you don’t say no then YTA to yourself. Don’t let your husband jeopardise his finances to fund an expensive education that has no guarantee of earning niece...

If cousin has other properties then he needs to use them sa collateral first before asking anything from your husband.

Betalisa − NTA. Always assume a loan will be a gift. Because in too many cases, it will be one.

If it wasn’t a huge risk, the borrower wouldn’t need a friend or family member to help. And odds are good  it may also destroy the relationship.

flindersrisk − NTA It would be a hellish 4-5 years, carrying all the risk, having no control. And the very idea of coming to the US just now, or for...

Others emphasized a harsher reality. Loans like this often turn into gifts when things don’t go as planned. And when that happens, it doesn’t just affect finances, it can damage relationships permanently.

Puskarella − NTA No one should be encouraged to go to the US as a foreign student at this time.

Also, if his relative cannot source a loan do they actually have the capacity to repay. They may have the willingness, but do they have the capacity?

Ambitious-Writer-825 − NTA Never cosign, put collateral up, lend money etc that you can't afford to lose. Period. Life happens and you and your husband could be on the hook...

Married finances are weird, and I don't know if a condo bought outside of your marriage but brought into your marriage would be considered marital property,

but if something goes wrong, you can bet they'll try to mess up your credit AND take the condo. If you have the money, give it to his cousin as...

Hopefully one day he'd repay it, but don't count on it. Never help more than you can afford to never see again.

4Blondes2Brunettes − This is really weird! As someone who fills out a FASFA….

Every year for the last five years and then six years ago for four years—— there are other ways to get student loans!

I’ve never heard of someone putting up a house as collateral for a Student loan in the United States.

Also, with the current administration in the White House—— I would never send my child to the United States to go to college. Ever.

A few also highlighted something important. Even if the property was purchased before marriage, the consequences of losing it would still affect both partners.

Sky14318 − Have you asked him why he would use the home of his parents rather than the other properties he is referring to?

Have you discussed the totality of your concerns with him? YWNBTA for having a respectful, adult conversation and asking questions.

It’s a big decision that needs to be thought out and talked out. Don’t leave anything unasked or unaddressed.

Discuss the “what ifs” with your husband. Discuss the issue of your savings and income helping to make it possible etc.

It’s a big deal and needs an organized, solid plan with both of you ENTIRELY on the same page

Her husband sees an opportunity to help someone he cares about. She sees a scenario where one decision could undo years of financial progress.

Both perspectives come from a place of care.

But care doesn’t cancel out consequences.

Sometimes, the hardest part of being supportive is knowing when support turns into exposure.

So what do you think? Is this a generous gesture worth the risk, or a line that should never be crossed when it comes to family and finances?

 

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