“AITA? My fiancé told me ‘this is it, take it or leave it.’ So I gave him the ring back and told him to get out of my house.”
My fiancé Tom (37M) and I (28F) have been together 2 years. He moved into my house 6 months ago and proposed a month ago. I thought we were solid, but now I’m questioning everything.I inherited a fortune 3 years ago. It changed my life but I live below my means, I work part time as a teacher, travel, and have a nonprofit in the works. I budget carefully so the money lasts. Only my dad and sister know the full amount.
When Tom moved in, I paid everything except most groceries. He wanted us to eventually buy a bigger house together so his dad could move in. I said no to living with in-laws, but suggested maybe a separate unit someday. He pushed back but agreed we needed to discuss finances first.Tom earns ~10k/month and has 100k saved. I have millions invested and about 40k/month income from it. When I told him, he was shocked. He said if I have so much, why not just buy the house and cover everything? I explained that just because I can doesn’t mean I should.
AITA?
EDIT: When we first started dating, he understandably questioned how I managed my lifestyle on a teaching salary. I explained that I had a small inheritance which allowed me to buy my house and have some savings to live on.
I admit I may have been wrong to be vague, but at the time we were just starting to date and I wasn’t comfortable sharing all the details yet. My house is nice, but nothing extravagant, and during our relationship we always split expenses 50/50 (dates, trips, everything).When he moved in, I offered to keep covering the utilities (since I was already paying them), and he would handle groceries. Things were fine until after we got engaged. I pushed for us to discuss everything openly before marriage, and we agreed on most things.About his father moving in: This isn’t something he wants right away, but he says eventually his dad would move in so he can take care of him. I adore his father, but I personally don’t want to live with in-laws.
His solution was that we should buy another house together, so he would feel like it’s “our” home instead of him living in my house. I understood that perspective, but the new house would also have to be larger if his dad were to move in, which I’m not comfortable with.About finances: Initially, when we discussed buying another house, the plan was to contribute together. But once we started looking at what we could afford, we had to lay our finances on the table. When he found out my net worth, everything shifted.He said that if we split 50/50, we couldn’t afford a bigger house, and since I “had the means,” I should buy the house myself, but it would still be “our” house. I told him that whatever amount he contributes would equal his share of equity in the property.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
🤣🤣🤣🤣 NTJ and perfect answer.
You said he makes $10,000 a month why isn’t he paying more just because you have the money doesn’t mean that you should be paying more of the bills. He was a gold digger and he is very upset that his shovel did not work.
The next day, the OP returned with an update.
Thank you so much for all your comments and support. This morning I woke up and Tom had made breakfast and asked if we could talk. He said things got out of control last night and he wanted to explain his side.
He told me he was upset that I had lied about my finances and felt like I didn’t trust him. He said the money difference made him feel that I would always have more power in the relationship and that he might be vulnerable to financial abuse.
I’m skeptical of his overnight change of heart, tigers don’t change their stripes.
He said the money difference made him feel that I would always have more power in the relationship and that he might. But I’m guessing it would have been ok for him to have the power if it was the case where he had more money.
You are 28. Leave him. You’ll find someone better.
A 28 year-old millionaire, let’s not forget. I don’t doubt OP will be able to find love again, but I do worry this won’t be the last time they run into the issue of discussing financials.
Hard agree. He feels emasculated, he tried to take control as a response. He is never going to have your back. Yes its the money but it’s also the maturity. He said yes to everything you asked for OP. Did he offer any genuine solution himself?
Eleven days later, the OP returned with their final update.
Hi everyone, thank you so much for all the comments and support. I took some time away to think, talk to my sister, my therapist, and my lawyers, and I’ve made my decision.
As much as I cared for Tom, I realized I can’t marry someone I don’t trust. What happened broke that trust, and I know it would always be in the back of my mind in our marriage. Every financial decision, I’d doubt him, and that’s no way to build a future.
Here’s what people had to say about OP’s final update:
Good for you. Take care of Your Self. Best of luck moving forward.
Tough choices — take time to process all of this, and remember that doing what is best for you and your future always has to come first before you can take care of other people. Trust in a relationship is the absolute bedrock. Everything else is built on that.
This worked out better. He sounds like a god digger if he was contributing so little and made that much money. NTA. Move on. Find someone who wants you for you, not your money. Update me!