" My fiancé ’s sept is sometime - shoal money … When you turn 16 , a standard endowment from his family is a $ 50 K railcar , and everyone begin $ 1 million at 18 from their combine monetary fund to pay for college , and then , you get your remaining millions when you graduate . "

Have you ever wondered what it’s like to be romantically linked to the super wealthy? In thesethreeRedditthreads, people who married or dated millionaires (and billionaires) revealed what it’s actually like — and how their lives changed. Here are the most shocking stories:

1.“I dated a woman whose family was rather well-off. I also worked with wealthy people for a while. She talked about visiting exotic parts of the world like it was nothing. They are knowledgeable about rich people’s stuff, like Rolexes and yachts. They all play golf, tennis, or both. They know international airports inside and out. They don’t talk about money unless it’s business or gossip. They are generally very opinionated about how people should do stuff.”

" Unless it involves their stage business , money is no object to them . They mostly are n’t frugal and never call for the price . ( Some stealth riches people are the complete inverse . ) They make a plenty of meter for their hobbies and to be with their kids . "

— u / lagrandesgracia

2.“I married into a hugely wealthy family. My father-in-law was president of an international medical staffing firm. He retired three times from the company, and each time, he had a bigger retirement package. My wife is cultured beyond belief, fluent in at least four languages, and has seen the world that most of us could only dream of seeing in our lifetimes. My wife is also one of the hardest working people I have ever met, and even with all the wealth, she actually practices charity to the point that I have to stop her. I never realized how influential the name was until visiting New York and staying at the Four Seasons, and a manager came over and called my FIL by name and pushed us to the front of the line. We were treated like royalty that week.”

" There was also my wedding to his girl . Not only did he foot the bill for everything ( the wedding ceremony reception consumed 12.5 gallons of Patrón ) , buthe flew my wife and me for a three - week honeymoon anywhere in the world on his dime . He return us his Amex Black and said have playfulness . Six countries , well over $ 100k in a honeymoon , and never said a word . "

— Anonymous

3.“I came from a low-class family. My biggest value was being kind — it mattered that we passed school but not that we had to be doctors. My family immigrated here, so it was really hard. My S.O. comes from the top 1%, is very intelligent, and has lots of money. They were the top at everything, and as a result, they were a little snobby. My family and my S.O. didn’t care about the relationship, but my S.O.’s parents and siblings were very upset over it. It took years for just the mother to like me.”

" They did n’t opine I was honest enough and constantly acted dusty . It was very hard on me before , but I learn not to care about others , and it ameliorate me . I could n’t deal less because I ’m happy . It would be prissy if they wish me , but I only necessitate my S.O. and my household . "

— u / xjnoodles

4.“I’m pretty sure my husband married me for my money. I was 29 and feeling lonely. We were both science nerds. He was a doctor’s son, but he was really not financially supported. I was a bar owner’s daughter and far wealthier than him; the money was parceled out to me in fairly small amounts, but it supported us. Although I appeared to be the stay-at-home do-nothing housewife to many I am sure, it was really my money supporting us and our three children. He did work, but he had a serious debt creation problem with credit cards, so his salary was never enough. When we turned 50, he met another woman, told me, ‘She’s rich!’ and abandoned me to basically poverty and food stamps. Lovely, right?”

" Fast - ahead two eld , I took my one-half of his retirement accounting , which was about $ 70k , and invested it , and now , I have close to a million . I’m hit for $ 5 million . Oh yeah , and now , I do n’t have to ' discover ' yet another maxed - out reference lineup in my name ever again . "

— u / Faefae33

5.“They don’t really have a concept of how rich they are. My ex-boyfriend was WEALTHY but had a complex about how he was super poor. It was because all of his friends were also wealthy, and he was maybe marginally less rich than some of them, so he considered himself on the lower end of the scale. They don’t really have a point of reference for how poor some people are. When we were together, I was living on a food budget of £50 a month, and he absolutely could not wrap his head around how a person could spend that little.”

" I lived with a horrendously rich friend ; his menage is nobility in his home country . One thing I ’ve noticed about him is that he ’s wholly incapable of grasping that if I stop work , I just block up being able-bodied to eat . He was confused about why I was worried about taking a calendar week off work and did n’t translate that I was upset I ’d lose money . He seemed to think that most the great unwashed process because they prefer to because he ’s neverhadto work . "

— u / lavenderacid

6.“I broke up with someone set to inherit over $1 billion from her father. Nice woman, no major issues, but I just didn’t feel like we clicked. Some days, I can’t help but think it was dumb when I’m looking at my very, very average bank account and salary. It would have been a more extravagant life, but I’m with someone who makes me happy, so I tend not to regret it.”

— u / Minia15

7.“I unknowingly married into a wealthy family. My wife’s parents are millionaire-next-door types. Their primary house is worth maybe $230K, but I had a feeling that something was going on because one time, when I was 23–24, they had found this lightly used Toyota Land Cruiser for sale in Georgia for some ridiculous amount of money, like $70K. I was going to Georgia for work the next week, and they asked me to buy it, and they’d pay me back when I got back with it. It literally did not register with them that a 23–24-year-old probably doesn’t have $70K in the bank. So, they sent me a pre-signed check and told me to fill it out with the final price. I had been dating their daughter for maybe three months at that time. About a year later, my father-in-law casually mentioned wanting a log cabin in the woods somewhere, preferably on the lake. I took it as if he were dreaming and said yeah, that would be really nice.”

" That coming weekend , he and my mother - in - law of nature put an offering in on a lake cabin with one of the good views I ’ve ever seen in my life . I ’d hate to know what they pay for that . I still did n’t really see what they did or did n’t have until they made me executor of their demesne . The vast majority of what they die with is go to charity and their church . Just wild . Moral of the story : Looks can be deceiving , and just because they have it , does n’t intend that you ’ll inherit it . "

— u / Moreofyoulessofme

8.“My best friend from childhood married a billionaire’s daughter. He’s still depressed and still himself. He lives a nice life, but it’s not his money. His kids are set for life, and he’s still miserable and complains a lot — but what can you do? He’s a mate.”

— u / puresav

9.“My side of the family didn’t have two nickels to rub together for a long time. I was the first one in my family to go to college, and move out of the state — let alone the county, let alone the town. I didn’t know of anything outside a Super 8, Motel 6, or Holiday Inn. My clothes were from factory outlets, Kmart, Walmart, etc. My first car was a 20-year-old piece of junk that burned oil. I had to take out loans and work full-time to make my way through college. My spouse’s side of the family was 100% polar opposite.”

" But they are so nice . They are charitable , they are genial , and they are earnest . Do I palpate I ’ve change a bit ? Probably . I now feel a morsel out of situation with my prolonged family at events , but that was bound to probably pass off anyway . "

10.“Her parents were feeding her money to begin with (she was a social worker who drove a $100K Land Rover). I visited her family’s lake house with speedboats and jet skis. She had a good attitude in life and just wanted to help underprivileged children. She just wasn’t for me.”

" I ’m now married , and we are doing just fine financially now ; we wreak in good money and are in a pretty high centile for our last worth per age bracket . But it ’s a far cry from the millions I believe she already hadand millions more she was arrange to inherit one day . "

— uranium / Chad_RVA

11.“I dated a man who didn’t work — he lived off of a trust fund. Oddly, since he could afford nearly anything, nothing had any value. He’d buy a $400 KitchenAid mixer and burn it up making Christmas candy the first week. If he decided to make more candy, he’d just go buy another $400 mixer. Nothing meant particularly ANYTHING to him.”

— u / BlitheringEediot

12.“I know a man who married the daughter of a wealthy family. She was a huge pain in everyone’s ass. Spent money like it was water and had no idea of its value or use. Unpleasant to everyone as none of them were important other than her parents, I guess — the source of the funds. Spoiled the kids, caused them to develop unearned attitudes. It was hard to watch.”

" It ended in divorce . He get a payout from the family , but I do n’t think it was deserving it . "

— u / Desert - Mouse

13.“I dated a woman for six years. I was days away from proposing when a friend of mine, who knew of my plan, told me he saw her cheat on me more than once with one of our other friends. When the truth came out, there was obviously a lot of turmoil, but she begged for forgiveness and promised it would never, ever happen again. Part of me believed her because we really were in love. I just couldn’t shake it, though. Couldn’t sleep. It was like a rock in my shoe. ‘Once a cheater, always a cheater’ never left my brain. I ended up dumping her and moving on. I married a middle-class woman from a farm who had a blue-collar dad. I was also raised in a lower-middle, blue-collar family.”

" The woman I dumped was the heiress of a big company , which she sold after we broke up and netted around $ 100 million . She hook up with a bozo , and they now have three home , Range Rovers , a Ferrari … you name it . I’m still friends with her on Facebook . I think about it a circle . I have no doubt I am much happier now with a faithful wife and four beautiful children , but bloody , that Ferrari looks like play . I care to get myself in a $ 250K+ line of work by geezerhood 30 and have give my ride out - at - menage - mom married woman and four children a wonderful minuscule life , but it ’s a far rallying cry from the 1 % . "

— uranium / DonnyMurphy

14.“My family had rough times. We lived in housing projects; my parents always (to this day) worked two jobs each and truly pushed the value of working hard for your money. We gave up a lot of luxuries, took out multiple loans, and saved every penny so we kids could afford private schools (they were much better than the public system) and then college. My husband is nowhere near the same. He grew up in Europe with old money. Both of his parents have their own businesses, and he had a great childhood where they struggled for very little. The shock came from just visiting his hometown.”

" It was gorgeous ! I had never been to Europe before that and was in complete awe . His parents owned multiple homes in the best territorial dominion and in other countries for vacation . They were so sweet and gave me 500 euros the day they encounter me because I was so nice ! I catch another couple of grand for my student loans purely because they see how much of a burden that is in America and did n’t require me to clamber . They also bought us a home as our wedding talent . That did n’t posture well with me and my kinsperson since we ’ve always lick , but that ’s another narrative .

Problem ? My husband never had to work for anything . Any time he needed money they , especially his mom , would just pass on it off without an topic , no matter the amount . He never inconvenience oneself with college and fundamentally just did what he want until meet me . Upon learning this , I state that I refused to consent an involvement ring with money he did n’t truly gain . That ’s when , at age 24 , he realized that influence for your money is difficult . He think he ’d easily just take up a business like his parents and die because he had no musical theme how complicated it really was . His parent bring in what they had done and cut him off so he could hear the time value of a dollar sign . I amply support the decision . He had to learn how to struggle for the first prison term since things were not sluttish soon afterward . Now thing are rougher , but we ’ve come together , built saving , run a small byplay , and became a strong brace in the end . "

— uranium / WanderFucking_Chef

A waiter handing a woman a glass of champagne

15.“My first girlfriend in high school went to a private Catholic school in town. Her grandparents own some company they sold in the ’90s, made millions, and then opened a ‘family insurance’ company now worth billions. She and all her siblings are in the trust to get more than 10% each. We didn’t last more than a year.”

" Right after high school , my 2nd lady friend ’s father was a tech hombre who was in the Navy when he was younger and then sold code to big company to this day . Would never have known he had this much , and he was invariably concern that ' people were after him and his wealth . ‘We did n’t last two years . My current girlfriend and next wife has a Padre who owns a small construction caller ; her grandfather was a top 1 % salesperson for a $ 100 billion society , and her great - grandfather was the first salesperson in the Midwest for a far-famed umber brand . Me ? I grew up poop - floor poor with seven sib on a farm . "

16.“I did not like the men I met who were wealthy. I have a JD/MBA, so I was not looking to marry into money in the gold-digger sense, I’m fine. The ones I met would shower me with material goods and expect me to be okay with whatever they did (often involving other women) because of the material gifts, which I didn’t want. Other people were obsessed with money, and that was all they talked about and focused on. Plus, they felt you should show off and look like you had money. One of them insisted I should buy a Mercedes. It was weird.”

" I wed my husband who did not arrive from a wealthy family , but he had a master ’s and a six - anatomy job . I ’ve been with him for most of my adult life , and it ’s been wonderful . He could care less about money , but he is n’t uneconomical , and he is n’t extravagant . grow up , my parents say me , ' It ’s just as easy to devolve in lovemaking with a flush gentleman’s gentleman as it is to fall in making love with a miserable man . ‘I fell in sexual love with my best Quaker and have no declination . "

— u / bidextralhammer

17.“My daughter married someone with a ton of cash in his pocket. She has earned a decent living herself, but together, she’s gonna live a lot nicer than she ever did with me growing up. Maybe it’s because of the cultural differences, but he and I have never seen eye to eye and don’t get along that well. I grew up very poor in a rough neighborhood in Boston, and according to everyone I know, I have an extremely crass and blunt personality. He grew up in an extremely wealthy family in the suburbs. We have next to nothing in common. As for my daughter, I think she’s definitely changed. I always sensed growing up that she resented the lack of money our family had. Both my son and other daughter seemed to embrace growing up in a blue-collar family and took pride in where they were from, but she always seemed unable to cope with the fact we couldn’t always do the things her friends could.”

" When I talk to my daughter and her husband , I just kind of palpate strange when they speak so casually about go out all the time — like , the estimate of take enough money to go to these upscale bars and restaurants all the time seems wild . Also , there ’s the value they seem to place on ' fit out ' and buy expensive gift ; everything playfulness is base around money . All my life , some of the best memories I have is just hanging out with my admirer , scrapping some stupid game together with the little that we had . … With them , it seems like they go brain - dead if they ca n’t buy something . It all seems stilted to me . "

— u / SouthieBornAndBred

18.“I did get together with someone who’s wealthy. I was shocked at how down-to-earth, caring, and giving very wealthy people are in real life. On the internet, they are vilified to the 10th degree, but I have never met anyone from that world who wasn’t charitable and generally nice to people around them.”

— uranium / Foreverforaminute

19.“We’ve been together for years, and we’re getting married in a few months. I grew up in a pretty standard middle to upper-middle-class family. I got a car when I got my license, but it was a 15-year-old Jeep, and my parents made me pay for half. When I shopped, it was at the mall, but we weren’t buying a designer or anything. That type of thing. I wasn’t spoiled, but I was privileged. My S.O.’s family is old-school money — the kind where if we’re in the city where his dad’s originally from, his last name holds clout, and people know who he belongs to. When you turn 16, a standard gift from his family is a $50K car, and everyone gets $1 million at 18 from their trust fund to pay for college, and then, you get your remaining millions when you graduate.”

" He invest his middling sagely , and now has a dear amount of money in the bank along with his own investment and such . The eldritch affair is how it ’s so promiscuous for him to just do thing and write them off as no big hatful . Like , once we got engaged and begin consolidating our finances , he paid off my student loans and credit cards without consider about it and just shrugged it off when I take him about it — money is just something that exists to him , and he ’s smart with it .

I do n’t feel like it ’s changed me or him much since we got together , as I always knew he had money . He ’s still just the way he always was . He was evoke in a unlike state from his dad ’s family , which is where the family unit money comes from , so he ’s a fairly normal , well - adjusted adult , unlike some of his cousins . I would say I ’m a bit more relaxed when it comes to accepting him pay for things . When we set out dating , it was unvoiced for me to be ok with it . It felt like shame or charity because I was so intelligibly broke compared to him . There has been some unearthly resentment from some of my friends and family , though . I ca n’t talk about things we do or like because I get some snide comment about how nice it must be to be spoiled , which is annoying because he does n’t really pay for anything in my day - to - day biography . It ’s definitely put a wedge between some of my friend / family because of it . "

— u / notasugarbabybutok

A couple laughing on a boat

20.“The men I dated when I was younger, whose parents were incredibly wealthy, were jerks. I can’t think of one of them who was a decent person — yet they will succeed in life, whereas an average person who was that much of a jerk would never be able to keep a job or have real friends. Everyone puts up with them because of their parents.”

" They were just mean , heartless , and had zero empathy . They expect the world to flex to them , but they grew up with handmaiden and chance that no one else would get . If Dad could indite an eight - digit check , you’re able to get into university , or get a line with the politics , or anything you want . Doors candid . It ’s a different existence . Money buys all sorts of thing . Yes , they were lustrous and smart , but it was a different globe . Money . Access . Power . No effect . The relaxation of us just do n’t live this way . They never had to be decent or kind . They felt entitled to whatever it was that twenty-four hour period . Nothing was fun or extra . Nice dinners at fancy places were unequal . Nothing was good enough . There was no pleasance in anything . The restaurant catering to your every whimsey ? Still not good enough . approach to the good seating ? Still ca n’t be happy . It does n’t count . Nothing was good enough , and they were unpleasant the whole way through it . I was embarrassed to be stand next to them or sit across from them . "

— uracil / whiskeysour123

And finally…

21.“I was surprised about how real the ‘network’ or ‘bubble’ of it is — it’s like the other side from the ‘it’s expensive being poor’ concept. It’s this weird internal community of people with money, and thus power, who are willing to make things happen as long as you’re ‘in.’ I mean, I would meet people at a fundraiser or something, and five minutes later, they’re happy to make a call that will get me a job at some huge firm. Or, like, my then-boyfriend would say, ‘Let’s go to this concert. Tickets are $180, but it’s okay; a friend’s parents have a box, so we’ll just join them.'”

" One time , the dishwasher in our flat broke , but we did n’t have to pay a dime for repairs because his friend from high school ’s parent own the construction , so they pay back it for free as a favor . "

— u / PhiloPhocion

Note : Some response have been edited for length and/or uncloudedness .

People clinking glasses for a toast

A woman sitting in a private jet

A couple in the back of a car with shopping bags around them

Stacks of cash

A man smoking a cigar and holding a croquet mallet

A man looking out from a balcony

A family gathering

Jet skis in a pool

A man using a KitchenAid mixer

A man fixing his tie

A family playing in their living room

a diamond ring

a woman holding shopping bags

A man exiting a car as a man holds an umbrella to shield him from rain

A woman opening a gift

People at the dinner table

A woman helping a bride put on her wedding dress

Someone handing someone else a check

A woman staring out the window of a private plane