AITA for not doing my step daughter’s hair?

Six kids in the house, one with hair down to her butt, and a dad working 12-hour shifts—sound familiar to any complex family warrior? This stepmom, who married in chaos two years ago, now has to juggle four kids, a one-year-old together, and her husband, a two-year-old, on the weekends. The 6-year-old’s thick hair takes over an hour to wash, dry, and style to her liking. Most visits? Braided and unwashed to keep everyone sane.

To be sure, the biological mother constantly texts accusing her of neglect and forbidding haircuts, while the stepmother insists that daily brushing and braiding should count. Social media explodes—some scream “lazy,” others scream “realistic.” The change? Everyone agrees the current situation is a recipe for burnout, but everyone is critical.

‘AITA for not doing my step daughter’s hair?’

The family math alone feels overwhelming before the hair even enters the chat…

I've been married to my husband for two years. Together we have a one year old. I have four kids from a previous relationship and he has two kids from...

The real headache centers on one very long, very thick head of hair…

Which leads me to my dilemma. My steppdaughter who is 6 has long hair. It's thick, and down to her b__t. It takes a good hour plus to wash, dry...

Time crunches hard when dad’s gone and six kids need attention…

My husband isn't always home, and I have five, sometimes six other kids that I have almost full time to tend too and don't have the time to fix her...

and leave it braided the entire weekend because of how much work it is. It says in my husband's custody papers that he has to have the mother's approval to...

Texts fly in every weekend with the same complaint…

My stepdaughter's mother almost every weekend is texting both me and my husband about how we aren't brushing her hair and sending her home with dirty hair that is full...

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We tried to explain to her that we make sure her hair is brushed and braided. I suggested maybe a haircut to make it more manageable and she got mad...

This stepmom is struggling to run a solo show for six kids while her dad works long shifts. Daily braiding and brushing isn’t anything new, but her biological mother treats her two-day-old hair like a crime scene. The real culprit? A custody arrangement that strictly manages hair length without clearly defining who will care for it on an hourly basis.

From the child’s perspective, consistency is more important than daily shampooing. “Most children’s scalps are healthy when washed every 3–7 days; too much washing strips natural oils and causes damage,” explains hair expert Dr. Kari Williams. Braids protect the ends and reduce tangles—hardly a sign of neglect.

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Practical solutions start with the dad: he can switch shifts, wake up early to style, or push for reconciliation to amend the no-cut rule. The stepmom can have detangling spray on hand and teach the 6-year-old simple twists. The biological mom can have the child braid her hair first thing on Friday morning.

Bottom line—everyone needs a team meeting. A quick message on a co-parenting app like “Let’s pick two easy parenting styles we can all agree on” will prevent the message from becoming toxic. The kids win when the adults stop “scoring” parenting and start sharing parenting strategies on Google Calendar.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Plenty of users jumped straight to team stepmom, calling the routine realistic…

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sickofdriving007 − NTA. Most hair types do not need daily washing and can easily go 2-3 days without it. Invest in a wide tooth comb so you can put it...

Used-Blue − NTA. I had the same type of hair when I was a kid. As long as you brush them and braid them daily, there is no need to...

WiseBat − NTA because it doesn’t sound like you’re just letting her hair become a mess. You’re still brushing it. That’s not n__lect. But this setup is NOT feasible.

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You cannot possibly spend an hour on her hair when you have 5-6 other children to care for as well. Your husband needs to work his schedule around so that...

NotLostForWords − NTA. You brush and braid it daily, that's enough. Also, despite what some people here seem to think, a child's hair does not need to be washed daily....

Of course this varies person by person and some people will need to wash their hair daily - usually these people are not small children though, so stop yelling n__lect....

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A couple kept it balanced, questioning the whole setup without full blame…

pinguthegreek − Why did you marry this man if you’re basically struggling to take care of 6 dependent children solo ? What made you think this could work if you’re...

You are only an a__hole to yourself for allowing this untenable situation to continue without you and your husband working as a team to make changes that make this work...

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hello_friendss − NTA stepdaughter’s hair is between your husband and his ex. You have other kids to look after and an hour just on her hair care is not feasible....

Lighthearted takes snuck in to cut the tension…

itsfrikkennug − YTA. The poor kid doesn’t have a choice in the hair that grows out of her head and as a 6 year old child she probably can’t manage...

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and takes longer to wash and style then that’s definitely an issue. Maybe look into some articles about easy hairstyles to do on long thick hair!

SophiaIsabella4 − NTA washing hair daily is unnecessary and sometimes harmful to some scalps and hair types. In fact one famous stylist had a product called "dirt" because freshly clean...

Mom can do all the extra haircare she wants to (because she insists on this length of hair on a 6 year old that can't care for her own hair)...

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AdGroundbreaking4397 − Info is there a racial difference?

wsbsuckah102 − NTA hair down to her b__t at 6?? That’s ALOT to take care of even without the other kids. If mom won’t allow a haircut I think a...

At its core, nobody’s winning—the stepmom’s exhausted, bio mom’s frustrated, and a little girl just wants her hair to look pretty without anyone yelling. Brushing and braiding every visit proves care, not neglect. The fix lies in dad stepping up and parents rewriting rules that serve the child, not egos.

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Would you push for that haircut amendment, or keep braiding and let the texts roll in?

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