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Student Loans
Ramsey Show hosts take a call from a man whose parents' pay his student debt The Ramsey Show Highlights/YouTube

I’m 35 and my parents are still paying my $70K+ student loans. My mom resents it and wants out but dad doesn’t. Should I take over the debt?

A 35-year-old borrower from Las Vegas took out student loans at 18 with what he describes as a clear promise from his parents: borrow what you need for college, and we’ll pay it off.

Seventeen years later, the balance still sits in the mid-$70,000 range and the agreement has become a source of tension that shadows family calls and holiday gatherings.

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“My dad is totally fine paying it,” Shane explained during a call into The Ramsey Show (1). “But my mother constantly brings up the fact that they are paying for my student loans.”

The comments, he said, often surface when she hears about his personal purchases or travel. The loans are in his name — making him legally responsible for the debt — but his father continues making minimum payments, while his mother increasingly wants out.

The result is a financial arrangement that has quietly turned into an emotional standoff.

When family agreements age poorly

Financial support between parents and adult children is common, but it can blur boundaries.

According to the Pew Research Center, about 60% of U.S. parents report providing some financial support to their adult children (2). But expectations often shift over time — particularly when verbal agreements lack clear timelines or conditions.

That appears to be what’s happening here. Shane’s parents initially agreed to cover the loans, but there was no written plan specifying how long they’d pay or whether the terms could change. Now, one parent still honors the original promise, while the other feels resentful.

Informal family deals can create tension because they mix money with identity, fairness and control. Even when everyone begins with good intentions, resentment can build if one party feels the arrangement is no longer equitable.

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A common situation

Shane sees the debt as something his parents committed to handling. Legally, it’s his.

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According to the U.S. Department of Education’s Federal Student Aid office, federal student loans belong to the borrower whose name is on the promissory note — regardless of private agreements about who will actually make payments (3). If payments stop, the borrower is responsible for repayment. Delinquency can damage the borrower’s credit and may lead to collection activity.

Shane needs a contingency plan even if his father keeps paying for now. “They could stop paying today, and it’s going to come to you,” Ramsey Show host George Kamel said.

Fellow host Rachel Cruze said this scenario has become increasingly common for adults whose parents helped finance college. The cost of tuition has pushed many families to make informal deals.

At the same time, adult children often structure their own finances and assume parental support will continue. When it doesn’t, the sudden shift can disrupt budgets and relationships simultaneously.

Many financial planners recommend limiting debt payments to about 10% to 15% of take-home pay to keep goals like retirement and emergency savings on track. If Shane suddenly had to absorb the full loan payment, that benchmark could help him gauge affordability and avoid overextending.

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Money conflicts inside families rarely stay about money. Cruze advised Shane to have a “very kind but very clear conversation” with his mother about how her comments affect him and his spouse. Kamel pointed out that the disagreement may really be between his parents, not him.

How to prepare if support disappears

The safest approach in situations like this is proactive planning rather than waiting for a decision from parents.

Here are some practical steps:

  • Confirm loan details: Log into your Federal Student Aid account to verify balances, interest rates, and repayment options.
  • Model a payment plan: Calculate what monthly payments would look like under the Standard Repayment Plan or an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan.
  • Build a transition fund: Start setting aside money now, even if parents still pay.
  • Set expectations: Have a direct conversation about whether the arrangement is temporary or permanent.

Family promises made when a borrower is 18 don’t always hold at 35.

Even if parents once agreed to pay, the safest financial move is to prepare as if they won’t. That means building a plan that protects both your finances and your relationships.

Because in situations like Shane’s, the real question isn’t just who should pay the loan. It’s about resolving it without costing the family more than money.

Article sources

We rely only on vetted sources and credible third-party reporting. For details, see our editorial ethics and guidelines.

The Ramsey Show Highlights (1); Pew Research Center (2); U.S. Department of Education’s Federal Student Aid (3)

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Monique Danao is a highly experienced journalist, editor and copywriter with 8 years of expertise in finance and technology. Her work has been featured in leading publications such as Forbes, Decential, 99Designs, Fast Capital 360, Social Media Today and the South China Morning Post.

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