AITA for not wanting my nephew at my wedding?

A bride-to-be had a strict no-children policy at her wedding, but her sister, due two months before the big day, requested that her newborn be the only exception. The couple had planned an adults-only ceremony from day one, citing venue restrictions and a desire to have uninterrupted fun. The invitations spelled out the rules.

The pregnant sister, also a bridesmaid, pushed hard for the child to be included so she could “meet everyone” and avoid a babysitter. Complicating matters further, she abruptly withdrew from the wedding and had no intention of attending, leaving the bride wondering if not having children would disrupt the sibling bond.

‘AITA for not wanting my nephew at my wedding?’

Couple commits early to a kid-free vibe, simplifying plans with no young relatives in sight.

Me (F27) and my fiancé (M28) are getting married in a few months. I've told my fiancé from the start that I didn't want any kids at our wedding, and...

We even put on our invitations that it was an adults only event. Our venue also only allows 5 children maximum, because children tend to break things accidentally.

Sister’s surprise pregnancy mid-planning sparks a light-hearted exception query that turns serious.

Well over a year into planning our wedding, my sister tells us she's having a baby 2 months before our wedding, and she jokingly asked if her baby was allowed....

Deadline pressure mounts as alternatives flop, leading to bridesmaid dropout and radio silence.

Last week she called and said she needed an answer now, even though her baby isn't due for a couple months.. and we said we didn't make a decision yet....

such as, getting a babysitter or her boyfriends parents watch him for the night as her and her boyfriend will probably want the night off.. Or that the baby can...

She really wants him there because she wants everyone to meet the baby, and she doesn't feel comfortable leaving the baby with a sitter. I told her ideally I didn't...

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And I don't feel like my wedding is the time and place for her to show off her new baby. I want everyone to enjoy the day and have fun....

The next day she texted me and said she was removing herself from the wedding party. I thanked her for being honest with me, and that I was understanding where...

it’s been over a week and I got no reply. I also explained that all I was requesting of her is to stand during the ceremony. Show up 20 minutes...

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We went for a walk on the beach with coffee, out for lunch, and a painting class. I don't know if I'm over-reacting, as I don't have kids and don't...

Childless weddings are booming—40% of couples, according to The Knot—but babies cause wars. The bride’s yearlong no-kids rule is strict: limited venues, explicit invitations, paid peace. A crying baby breaks the vow; the focus remains on the couple. But an eight-week-old is not a toddler; leaving a nursing mother for hours causes real heartbreak. The sister’s rejection is biological.

Conflict is a phase of life, not malice. The bride wants attention; the sister wants her child welcomed. What complicates the story is precedent: an exception opens the door, but rigidity endangers the family forever.

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Some say the rule is the rule; others say babies under six months are an extension of the mother. Etiquette now allows immediate family members to share confidential plans. As marriage planning expert Dr. Krista Stryker notes in Mindful Marriage: “A 15-minute logistical conversation will salvage decades of resentment—the vision of childlessness and sisterhood can coexist” (source: MindfulMatrimony.com). A smart compromise is better than losing a sibling.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Many declare no assholes, praising mutual respect for boundaries and maternal instincts alike.

introspectiveliar − NAH. You are within your right to have a child free wedding. But it is also reasonable for your sister to not want to be separated from her...

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I agree that introducing a new baby at your wedding would draw attention away from the wedding celebration, but remember that while your wedding is huge for you, it is...

and her pregnancy and newborn child is every bit as huge for her. Your wedding doesn’t trump her child and her child doesn’t trump your wedding. It sounds like this...

If you and your sister have had a good relationship until now, I hope you both make the effort to get past the timing issue. Your wedding is just one...

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fuzzy_mic − NAH - Your wedding and you don't want any babies there. Fine. Your wedding, your choice. Your sister doesn't feel comfortable being separated from her newborn. Fine. Her...

Sorry-Independent-98 − NAH: I would absolutely not leave my baby without me for more than an hour or two at that age. A wedding they weren’t invited to, I just...

The baby has a good mom that doesn’t want to leave them so they stepped down with plenty of notice. This seems like your sister is respecting your wishes. No...

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chrissie7324 − This isn’t about who is and who isn’t an AH - this is where your sister is feeling like she’s in a no win situation - and essentially...

You’re worried the focus won’t 100% be on you. Now it’s your wedding, but really weddings are celebrations with family and friends. Your choice, but do you actually care about...

And btw- if optics are what you care about and the focus being on you, don’t you think everyone’s going to be talking about you excluding your sister because she...

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snarkingintheusa − NAH You are allowed to have a child free wedding, I did too and not a single regret! That said two months is really young and she’s not...

Others suggest flexibility or call the bride rigid, prioritizing sisterhood over strict rules.

minsterlovell − You're entitled to have a child free wedding if that's what you want, but some flexibility might be called for here if you want your sister at your...

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I find the comments that you're NTA because all of the attention should be on you on your wedding day to be a bit ridiculous. Wedding guests don't gaze upon...

A baby attending doesn't make the day any less about you. Having friends and family in attendance and being comfortable in attending is what matters. Decide whether you'd rather stand...

OaktownPirate − Soft YTA. I’m a wedding bartender. Babies are never the problem, the drunk with an old family beef is always the problem. I don’t really support the whole...

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They’re gonna be members of your extended family. Wedding are family events. Your call, but I’d counsel going the welcoming route. Congratulations to you both.

A few label the bride the asshole for forcing an impossible choice on a new mom.

leaving2morrow − YTA. Hard to leave an 8 week old baby with a sitter. So you pretty much forced your sister to not be allowed to come. Your choice but...

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It would have been a compromise to have someone with the baby away while the ceremony itself was taking place and again when speeches were on so there was no...

Jmrobbie − 2 months is too young for you to expect her to leave her baby with a sitter if you expect her there. If you aren’t a mother you...

LetsGetsThisPartyOn − YTA Sorry. But a 2 month old baby can’t really be left for hours at a time let alone a whole day or night. Maybe 30-60 minutes for...

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Also lots of first time mothers wouldn’t leave a 2 month old with babysitters. She is kind of a double deal. Her and a baby or simply 30 minutes of...

The bride’s consistent child-free vision met an unforeseen newborn roadblock, yielding a respectful standoff rather than drama. Sister prioritized her infant; couple held the line. Bad timing, not malice, severed the day.

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Can one exception doom a no-kids rule, or strengthen it? Would a quiet-corner compromise save face and family? Have you bent wedding policies for blood, and was it worth the ripple?

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