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How to Tell a Friend You Can’t Afford Something

A straightforward guide for South Africans who value their independence


Why This Is Hard

If you’ve ever had to stretch a budget until it snaps, you know the feeling. You’ve been the person who had to take help when you didn’t want to. You’ve sat with the shame of not being able to match what others can do. And now, even when things are a bit better, the idea of saying “I don’t have the money” still feels like stepping backward.

You’re not alone in this. South Africa is a country of deep inequality. Many of us are one unexpected expense away from broke. The cost of living keeps climbingโ€”petrol, electricity, groceries, rent. Yet there’s still an unspoken pressure, especially among friends, to keep up appearances.

This article is for people who’d rather figure things out alone than admit struggle. But sometimes honesty with the right people is not weakness. It’s just practical.


What You Actually Fear

Before the words come out, there’s usually a storm of worry:

  • They’ll think I’m poor.
  • They’ll pity me.
  • They’ll stop inviting me.
  • I’ll owe them something.
  • I’ll feel small.

These fears make sense if you’ve ever had to rely on others when you had no choice. But here’s the truth most people won’t tell you: your friends usually already know. Or they suspect. Or they don’t care as much as you think. The person who judges you for your bank balance was never a real friend to begin with.


The Direct Approach

Sometimes the best way is the shortest way. You don’t need a long story.

“I’d love to, but I can’t swing it this month. Let’s do something else?”

“I’m tightening up my spending right now. Rain check?”

“That sounds amazing, but it’s not in my budget. You go aheadโ€”I’ll catch the next one.”

Say it plainly. Don’t over-explain. The more you justify, the more it sounds like you’re apologising for existing.


If They Offer to Pay

This is where it gets complicated for people who hate receiving. A friend might say, “Don’t worry, my treat.”

You have options:

Accept graciously. If this person is genuine and you trust them, letting them pay once in a while is not the same as being dependent. Friendship goes both ways. One day you’ll be the one who can cover the bill.

Suggest a trade.“You get this one, I’ll get the next.” Even if the next one is months away, it preserves your sense of balance.

Decline firmly but kindly.“I appreciate it, but I’d rather we do something we can both afford. How about we braai at my place instead?”

There’s no wrong choice here. What matters is that you pick the one that lets you sleep at night.


Suggest Cheaper Alternatives

One of the best ways to protect your pride is to redirect. You don’t have to say I can’t afford it if you reframe the whole plan.

Table

Instead of…Try…
Dinner at a restaurantA potjie at home
A weekend awayA day trip to a local nature reserve
Concert ticketsA free community event or park hangout
The new mall movieA DVD night (yes, people still do this)
Drinks at a barA bottle store run and someone’s stoep

South Africa is full of cheap or free ways to spend time together. A hike in Table Mountain National Park. A township tour. A drive to the beach. A shared playlist and a sunset. Good company doesn’t require a big budget.


When the Friendship Is One-Sided

Here’s a harder truth: some friendships only work when you’re spending money. If someone consistently suggests things you can’t afford and makes you feel bad about it, that’s not a money problem. That’s a respect problem.

You don’t have to cut them off. But you can notice the pattern. You can pull back. You can invest your time in people who meet you where you are, not where your wallet should be.


The Long Game

If you’re in a season of not having enough, that’s what it is: a season. It doesn’t define your worth. It doesn’t erase your skills, your history, or your future.

But while you’re in it, you can do a few things:

  • Be honest with yourself. Denial costs more than honesty. Saying no to one thing means saying yes to keeping your rent paid or your lights on.
  • Build a small emergency fund. Even R200 a month is something. It’s a buffer between you and the next time you have to ask.
  • Find free communities. Running clubs, church groups, volunteer organisations, online forums. Connection doesn’t always cost.
  • Remember what you’ve survived. If you’ve made it through worse, you can make it through an awkward conversation.

A Final Word

There’s a difference between asking for help and simply stating your limits. The first requires vulnerability. The second is just honesty. You’re allowed to be honest.

Your friend might surprise you. They might say, “Same, actually.” They might be relieved someone else said it first. In a country where so many are quietly struggling, your honesty might be the permission they needed too.

You are not less because you have less right now. You’re just a person managing what you have. That’s not failure. That’s life.


If this article resonated with you, share it with someone who might need it. Sometimes the best way to help is to let someone know they’re not the only one.

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