Father Treats His High-Earning Engineer Son As A Human ATM And Demands $20,000

A high-earning engineer spent years acting as the family’s silent bank, footing every bill until a staggering twenty-thousand-dollar demand for a luxury getaway pushed him to the absolute breaking point. His father’s bold request came with a stinging slap to the face: the son was strictly forbidden from attending the trip to avoid ruining the intimate atmosphere.

The cruel exclusion unmasked a toxic dynamic where a parent viewed his child as a bottomless offshore account rather than a beloved family member. Tensions finally exploded when the father shamelessly admitted he only promised the lavish escape to his other children because he expected his oldest to pay for everything. Facing a storm of family backlash, the son stood his ground, choosing to shutter the bank for good after realizing his love was merely being traded for luxury.

A chemical engineer refuses to fund his father’s $20,000 vacation after being told he is not invited.

Father Treats His High-Earning Engineer Son As A Human ATM And Demands $20,000
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for refusing to help my father financially when I make over 5 times his salary?'

I (31M) have a father (52M) who has 2 other children from another woman.

He always asks me for money because I am a chemical engineer that makes over 250k$ a year.

Most of the time I do it, because his asks are pretty small, but he has never had a vacation with me before.

In the last 2 years, he has asked me to pay for his trips to have quality time with his other kids.

This year, I asked if I could also tag along, but he said that I wouldn’t fit in and it’d be awkward.

This time, the trip cost over $20,000, so I said, if I’m paying for this trip, I’m tagging along.

He got very annoyed and said that he had promised a father-son bonding experience for them.

I asked him why he promised to do something he couldn’t afford, and he said” because I know you’ll pay for it.”

I asked him why we never had father-son bond time, and he shouted “ARE YOU GONNA DO IT OR NOT?” I told him no.

Now all of my family is saying that just be I was denied something that doesn’t mean I should deny it to other people,

but maybe he shouldn’t’ve promised someone he’d do something when he couldn’t afford it?

Idk, a lot of people are telling me that I am the a__hole. What do you think?

Our Redditor is dealing with a classic “Golden Goose” dynamic. When one child achieves significant financial success like earning a $250,000 salary, the power balance in the family often shifts in unhealthy ways. The father isn’t seeing a son; he’s seeing a solution to his own lifestyle aspirations.

The psychological weight here is heavy. The OP (Original Poster) has been “paying his dues” for years, likely hoping that financial generosity would eventually purchase the paternal affection he craves.

However, the father’s blunt admission that the OP would “make it awkward” on a $20,000 trip highlights a painful reality: the father is compartmentalizing his life, using one son to fund the happiness he shares with his “other” family.

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This isn’t just a quirky family spat; it’s a symptom of a broader social issue regarding “financial infidelity” and parental entitlement. According to a study on family financial dynamics, a staggering 35% of people who experience financial conflict with family members report significant long-term damage to the relationship.

Entitlement often grows where boundaries are absent, and by consistently saying “yes” to smaller requests, the OP inadvertently trained his father to expect a blank check for bigger dreams.

Expert insight suggests that this behavior is rarely about the money itself and more about a lack of respect for the adult child’s autonomy. Susan Forward, Ph.D., a renowned therapist and author of Toxic Parents, notes: “The child is never a person in his or her own right to a toxic parent; the child is an extension of the parent’s needs and whims.

In this scenario, the father’s outburst is a textbook example of using intimidation to bypass a reasonable boundary when the “ATM” finally malfunctions.

To move forward, the OP needs to recognize that financial support is not a substitute for a relationship. Neutral advice would suggest a total “financial blackout” until the relationship can be recalibrated on emotional terms.

If the family members are so concerned about the father’s broken promise, they are more than welcome to start a GoFundMe. Healthy families operate on mutual respect, not on the balance of a checking account.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many users emphasize that the father is treating the son as a “personal trust fund” or an ATM rather than a family member.

JustheBean − NTA I thought this was going to be about helping your dad with medical bills... What planet is your father on?

$20,000 for a vacation you aren’t even a part of?? That’s insane! You’re his son, not his personal trust fund.

tinmru − NTA. The truth is your father is a leech and uses you as his ATM.

QuinGood − NTA... The ATM is closed. You don't deserve this sort of treatment. Let the "concerned family members" crowdfund his vacations.

MaryAnne0601 − NTA You are NOT an ATM, stop acting like one! The bank of the son he only wants money from is closed. To him you’re not a son,...

Some contributors point out the deep irony and cruelty of the father asking the user to fund a “bonding experience” that excludes him.

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throw05282021 − NTA. He wants you to pay for a father and son bonding experience that he refuses to share with you.

Him promising to spend $20k of your money without asking you first is unbelievable.

He's given himself way too much permission to treat you horribly.

RandomWombat11523 − NTA. I don't understand how someone can make expensive plans for vacation using someone else's money.

And to add insult to injury, your dad is not even including you in the plans and still expect you to pay for it?

Others suggest that no amount of money will buy the father’s love or approval and advise the user to seek therapy or go no-contact.

fly1away − I'm not joking here, spend the money on therapy for yourself instead.

Because it's not healthy that you've been doing this, and accepting this treatment from your father. NTA. Time to break the chains.

MaryAnne0601 − Stop torturing yourself. You could give him a million dollars

and it will never make him love you and want you like he does the others. Accept it, block him.

Confident_Macaron_15 − NTA - your family sucks. Never give them money ever again.

A few contributors highlight the sheer absurdity of the amount requested, noting it exceeds what many successful families spend on themselves.

throw05282021 − I make good money, and I don't spend $20k taking my wife and kids on vacation.

That's blatantly abusive behavior... or he's lying to you about what he plans to spend the money on. That's enough money to pay for another mistress.

At the end of the day, a $20,000 price tag is a lot to pay for the privilege of being excluded. The Redditor isn’t just closing a wallet; he’s attempting to open his father’s eyes to the fact that a son is a human being, not a financial strategy.

Do you think the Redditor’s ultimatum was fair given the lifelong stakes, or did he overplay his hand by attaching strings to his “gift”? How would you handle a parent who treats your success like their personal lottery win? Share your hot takes below!

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