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Financial & Money Issues

They've destroyed their credit and want to use mine

9 min read

By Michael J. Wilson Jr., CIP, CFI · Author of Loving Lions, Interventionist, and Family-Recovery Specialist · Last reviewed June 19, 2026

Quick answer

Protecting your credit and financial security when addiction has damaged their financial reputation and they seek access to yours.

Situation Recognition

Your child's addiction has destroyed their credit through unpaid bills, defaults, and poor financial decisions. Now they're asking to use your credit for apartments, cars, loans, or other financial needs, promising they'll make the payments.

Michael Wilson's Insight

"Your credit represents your financial future and security. Addiction doesn't make better financial decisions just because it's using someone else's credit." Protecting your credit isn't mean—it's necessary for your security and prevents enabling their continued avoidance of natural consequences.

Comprehensive Guidance

Why addiction seeks access to good credit:

  • Their damaged credit prevents access to housing, vehicles, and loans
  • Using your credit avoids facing consequences of their financial choices
  • They genuinely believe they'll make payments this time
  • Addiction impairs judgment about realistic financial planning
  • They're desperate and see your credit as the solution

Risks of allowing credit access:

  • You become legally responsible for all debts incurred
  • Late or missed payments damage your credit score
  • Default leaves you responsible for the full amount
  • Creates ongoing financial entanglement during active addiction
  • Enables continued avoidance of building their own financial responsibility

Protecting your financial security:

  • Never co-sign loans, leases, or credit applications during active addiction
  • Don't add them as authorized users on credit cards
  • Monitor your credit reports regularly for unauthorized accounts
  • Freeze your credit if identity theft is a concern
  • Keep important financial documents secure

Implementation Steps

  1. Have one clear conversation: "I love you, but I can't risk my financial security. I'll help you find other solutions that don't involve my credit."
  1. Offer alternative support: Help research bad credit housing options, co-signer services, or secured credit cards for rebuilding
  1. Protect your credit actively: Monitor credit reports monthly and consider credit freezes if needed
  1. Document their requests: Keep records of financial manipulation attempts for pattern recognition
  1. Stay consistent: Every exception teaches them that persistence works and your boundaries aren't real

What to Expect

Intense pressure and emotional appeals about being "homeless" or unable to function without credit access. They may create urgent situations requiring immediate credit decisions. Anger when you maintain boundaries. Often, they find alternative solutions when credit access is consistently unavailable. Your consistent boundaries teach them to develop their own financial responsibility.

Professional Resources

East Point Behavioral Health: (855) 887-6237 - Family financial boundary coaching and addiction impact guidance

Credit Monitoring Services: AnnualCreditReport.com for free credit reports

Financial Counseling: National Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC) for debt and credit guidance

Crisis Resources: 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline if financial pressure creates emotional crisis

Key Takeaways

Your credit represents your financial future and security—protect it during active addiction
Co-signing or sharing credit during addiction creates legal responsibility for their choices
Damaged credit forces them to face consequences and develop alternative solutions
Alternative support like research help is more helpful than credit access
Consistent credit boundaries teach financial responsibility and realistic planning

Ask Michael

They've destroyed their credit and want to use mine

Talk this through with Michael, the author — he’ll pick it up right where you are. Included with Premium.

Need Personal Guidance?

This scenario provides general guidance. For your specific situation, consider professional support from the East Point team.

This guidance is educational and reflects the author’s lived and professional experience. It is not a substitute for professional medical, clinical, or legal advice. If you or someone you love is in immediate danger, call 988 or 911.