AITA for refusing to eat a vegan meal at my vegan friend’s place?

Friday nights mean greasy wings, cheesy pizza, and zero regrets—a sacred ritual for OP’s friend group. When a new guy’s girlfriend offers to host and feed everyone, it’s all high-fives and “how sweet!” Until they arrive: no delivery boxes, just cucumber-wrapped “vegan sushi,” fruit skewers, and crackers with mystery dips. Healthy? Sure. Movie-night fuel? Hard pass.

Confusion turns to sticker shock at the “bio” ingredient bill—pricier than usual, thanks to vegan swaps like cream cheese no one craves. The group politely declines to eat (or pay) for Wednesday-gym fare on cheat day. Cue tears, ghosting from the boyfriend, and a fractured circle. Was it rude to reject the effort, or fair to skip funding a menu mismatch?

‘AITA for refusing to eat a vegan meal at my vegan friend’s place?’

The tradition is simple: wings, pizza, pure bliss:

So me (22F) and my group of friends have the tradition of having movie nights every friday/saturday. Usually the same 2 people host due to availibity/space in their home/roommate situations

and we'll either all contribute with snacks, the hosts will provide food and drinks and we'll all chip in or we just order food in whatever app has a lower...

New girl wants to impress, group says yes:

One of the guys in the group had been dating this new girl for a couple of weeks and he wanted to introduce her to the group, and I guess...

We all thought that was super considerate and we agreed, since she seemed like a really nice girl and the gesture was really kind. When the day came we asked...

The reveal hits like a sad salad:

However when we got there the good was all this vegan and fit type food - which is nothing wrong, but it's just not something we wanted to eat on...

It was a lot of "vegan sushi" type of stuff (random stuff rolled up with cucumber), fruit on skewers, and crackers with dipping sauce. We didn't know she was vegan...

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Bill drops, group balks:

When she told us a price we all got a little confused, to say the least. We thought it was nice of her to want to cook but it was...

We told her that we appreciated the work she went through but that it wasn't something we enjoyed and we didn't want to pay for food we didn't like/didn't want...

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but not only did we just not want to consume the food (so it wouldn't make sense for us to pay), the bill was also significantly more expensive than usual...

Some of my friends straight up didn't like the stuff that was in the vegan sushi (aversion to cucumber and cream cheese is very prevalent apparently),

but I'll admit that I was a little more petty I look forward to wings and pizza that awaits me at the end of a long week and I felt...

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and I also think she was quite petty for not giving us a heads up about the food, I think we'd all agree to politely decline but invite her to...

This isn’t about veganism—it’s about consent, communication, and the social contract of hosting. Movie night has a culture: indulgent, predictable, shared cost. The girlfriend, eager to impress, bypassed all three.

Etiquette expert Diane Gottsman warns: “Hosts must disclose dietary restrictions upfront—especially when guests are paying.” A simple “I’m vegan, planning a plant-based menu—cool?” prevents ambush. Silence isn’t consent; it’s assumption.

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Financially, the group followed precedent: hosts provide, group chips in. But precedent assumes similar fare. Doubling the budget with premium “bio” swaps without warning? That’s a bait-and-switch. Refusing to subsidize unwanted food isn’t entitlement—it’s boundary-setting.

The boyfriend is the missing link. He knew both worlds: the group’s cheat-day cravings and his girlfriend’s lifestyle. Failing to bridge them—warning the group or guiding her toward vegan pizza/wings—set everyone up for failure.

5. Community Reactions

Reddit turns into a battlefield of forks and feelings, with opinions splitting faster than vegan cream cheese.

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A vocal camp declares YTA, accusing the group of rudeness and closed-mindedness for rejecting hospitality:

Famous_Specialist_44 − You all thought she was considerate to host and accepted the offer, and she followed the usual protocol and provided food and then told you how much to...

YTA because you rudely complained about the food and refused to pay. She must have felt humiliated having put in lots of effort to impress her boyfriends friendship group. Very...

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Big_Zucchini_9800 − YTA it was her first time hosting and she didn't know what you guys would want/expect. If no one specifically told her "this is everyone's cheat day,

we only eat wings and pizza" then you can't expect her to have known that. She thought maybe she could show you a little bit of her culture, but you...

when she would be waaaay more polite to you than you were to her. I'm not vegan but I cook for vegans a good amount and they are so sweet...

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As a polite guest you could have jus eaten the food, paid like usual, and told her that next time you guys would do a potluck so she could have...

[Reddit User] − YTA id go with e s h because she should have pointed out vegan but you’re just being a downright AH about it. She hosted. She provided...

Some folks have different diets and like to share their cooking. You were rude and juvenile about it.

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ExistenceNow − YTA and you come off like a child who didn't get their chicky nuggies.

[Reddit User] − Imagine not being able to go a single evening without eating animals. And no, I’m not vegan myself, but it’s ONE meal, ONE evening.

How can you be so self-centered and rude? ? And I don’t believe for a second that it was so disgusting that you couldn’t eat it. . you were just...

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ResoluteMuse − It would not have killed you to eat fruit and vegetables for one night She should have mentioned it would be a vegan menu. Edit: based on OPs...

DPropish − YTA. Just rude & entitled. Eat hummus? Vegan. Eat babaganoush? Vegan. Here’s the thing, you can try new s__t and not be a complete a__hole about it. Why...

Others land on ESH, blaming poor communication on all sides—especially the boyfriend:

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krankykitty − ESH But there are degrees of suckiness. This is going to be an unpopular opinion. I think your hosts should have provided a vegan equivalent of wings or...

Your friend knew the type of food the guests were expecting and should have gently guided his gf to providing at least some food that would meet the usual fare.

However, the guests who rudely rejected the offered hospitality were also at fault. Sometimes it happens that you end up at someone’s house and you don’t like what they serve.

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Good manners dictates that you eat what you can—OP says the meal is what he would normally eat on a weeknight, just not the vegan version—and politely decline the rest....

A simple, “What’s on the menu? I have some food allergies/intolerances,” would have been a smart move. But when you agreed that your friend’s gf would cook, you were agreeing...

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DonutsAviator − ESH - she should have told people she was vegan and that she was planning a vegan menu. That's not typically expected in most places. She also should...

Just like bringing alcohol to the house of someone that doesn't drink. Some are ok with it, others find it offensive. You should have at least made the attempt to...

There also a polite way to say "that's above what I budget for these nights" without going "your food is gross and I'm not going to pay for it" which...

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She also should have asked if there was a typical budget or mentioned the budget she was thinking to make sure people would be OK with it. All around this...

MyPath2Follow − ESH but the GF imo. Where exactly was the communication when all of this was going down? GF isn't the a-hole imo, her boyfriend is. HE would have...

He can be mad at ya'll all he wants, HE should have been more vocal with all of you. NTA tho for not wanting to pay for food you didn't...

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She just provided healthy foods and snacks. It's not really the end of the world and you guys could have been a lil more mature about it imo.

A smaller but fierce NTA faction defends the group’s right to opt out—especially on cost and surprise:

[Reddit User] − NTA. It was fine for her to provide only vegan food if that's her thing, but not OK to do it without warning, spend over the odds...

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Instead, I suspect she went on a bit of a proselytising trip and expected you to pay for the privilege of it.

DeadGodJess − I'm leaning towards NTA. Either the Girlfriend or you guys probably should have asked some questions before going forward with this

but what confuses me here is why the Boyfriend didn't either encourage her to make food more like what you guys are into for movie night (there's vegan options that...

Like, she's not forcefeeding you anything, you're being dramatic, but it is a little wild to me to serve a group a whole bunch of foods they don't usually eat...

Like, if I'm offering to feed people I ask 800 questions, especially if I know I'm gonna pop out with something they don't usually eat. I feel the Boyfriend really...

Jazzy404404 − I think your friend is the a__hole. He knows what you all like to eat during your movie nights. What did he expect? Also why didn't she inquire...

HolyGonzo − Update after answer: yep, YTA INFO: was there an expectation that everybody would chip in and pay for whatever she made?

Or was this particular time presented as though she was going to make something for free instead of you guys paying for delivery? It seems there was past precedent that...

Someone offered to provide food and you accepted without asking any questions, and you're complaining because she didn't read your mind. It sounds like your friend relayed to her the...

[Reddit User] − I don’t think your behavior rises to the level of a__hole, but it definitely seems rude. It was, at the end of the day, one meal. Nothing...

No one’s the villain—everyone’s just hungry and under-briefed. The girlfriend overreached with surprise evangelism; the group under-delivered on grace. The boyfriend? Silent MVP of the mess. Next time: menu preview, budget cap, hybrid potluck. Easy fix. Would you eat the cucumber roll to keep peace? Pay half out of politeness? Or stand firm on “no wings, no wallet”? And when hosting newbies, who owns the communication fail—the host or the vet?

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