AITA for revoking in-laws access to our pool?

A homeowner returns to find eight unsupervised teenagers splashing in her private pool, sparking a family standoff over safety rules and entitlement. The poster and her husband had generously shared their backyard oasis with his siblings’ families for years, providing gate keys under one firm condition: an adult must always supervise. This incident shattered that trust when the 15-year-old niece invited seven friends without permission or oversight, leaving the poster watching nervously from inside.

Tensions escalated as the sister-in-law dismissed concerns, refusing to promise it wouldn’t happen again and blaming the lack of house access. The couple changed the locks and restricted pool use to times when they’re home, angering the brother-in-law who insists his young children need unsupervised access despite the poster’s growing frustration with cleanup duties. What began as a kind favor now feels like an imposed obligation, forcing the poster to question if revoking privileges makes her the antagonist in her own home.

'AITA for revoking in-laws access to our pool?'

The family had long enjoyed unrestricted pool access until one incident flipped the script.

My husband and I have a nice backyard with a pool and have always let his siblings take their kids to it whenever they want, both of them had keys...

A single, unwavering rule governed every visit.

Our one rule has always been that an adult has to be in the backyard with them. I've never changed this rule or put an "age out" clause on this...

The poster arrived home to an alarming sight that shattered the arrangement.

I came home a few weeks ago and my neice and a few of her friends were at the pool. My neice is fifteen, and she's a good swimmer. I...

but there were 8 of them and I don't know any of her friends or if they're strong swimmers, and in that situation they could still easily be having fun...

But afterwards I called her mom and said I was really uncomfortable with the situation. SIL brushed me off and said it's not unreasonable and would be "weird" if her...

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and would embarrassing for her and blamed me because they don't have access to the house when they're over if we're not home. I got really annoyed and said I...

Lock changes and family-wide restrictions followed, igniting fresh complaints and deeper exhaustion.

My husband and I talked it over and decided to change the backyard lock and texted all of our his siblings that we're sorry but pools only open when we're...

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and most of the time when they want to swim at our house we're not going to be home (I work mostly on weekends and my husband is out of...

but I actually think it's probably time we put a stop to the whole thing anyway. My husband argues no way would his brother send his kids without supervision (they're...

but I'm just kind of over it all together especially since I'm always the one picking up the pool toys and putting patio furniture back and stuff after they're over....

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but for me it's kind of just making me dig my heels in harder because it's starting to be like using our pool is some kind of human right vs....

My husband and I talked it over and decided to change the backyard lock and texted all of our his siblings that we're sorry but pools only open when we're...

and most of the time when they want to swim at our house we're not going to be home (I work mostly on weekends and my husband is out of...

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but I actually think it's probably time we put a stop to the whole thing anyway. My husband argues no way would his brother send his kids without supervision (they're...

but I'm just kind of over it all together especially since I'm always the one picking up the pool toys and putting patio furniture back and stuff after they're over....

but for me it's kind of just making me dig my heels in harder because it's starting to be like using our pool is some kind of human right vs....

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Homeowners face massive legal exposure when others use their pools without supervision, turning generosity into a potential nightmare. The poster’s rule isn’t arbitrary; it’s a shield against drowning risks, lawsuits, and insurance nightmares that could bankrupt a family. Her sister-in-law’s refusal to commit signals ongoing boundary violations, while the brother-in-law’s complaints ignore how one person’s actions poisoned the well for everyone. Simultaneously, the poster’s cleanup burdens highlight unequal labor in this “favor,” breeding resentment that erodes relationships.

Opposing views frame this as overreaction to teens who “can handle themselves,” yet data crushes that illusion—pools remain deadly even for strong swimmers in groups. The niece’s invitation of seven strangers amplified dangers like horseplay or hidden weak swimmers, beyond that complicating oversight. The husband’s push for partial access reveals family loyalty clashing with partnership, but the poster’s stance prioritizes property rights and peace. What makes the story more complicated, the knot tightens with entitlement treating private amenities as public goods.

Broader society increasingly debates “found family” versus nuclear boundaries, especially in blended households where in-laws expect perpetual perks. “Pool owners should require supervision for anyone under 18 and consider liability waivers for adults,” advises insurance expert Amy Bach of United Policyholders.

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This incident mirrors rising disputes over shared spaces, urging clear contracts upfront. Ultimately, the poster models healthy limits, reminding that favors aren’t forever. Revoking access protects assets and sanity, teaching relatives to value hospitality—or seek public alternatives.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Many users rallied behind the poster, stressing liability horrors and rule enforcement without compromise.

Major_Barnacle_2212 − I didn’t have to read past a child being unattended at your pool, let alone with friends. NTA. You’re liable for ANYTHING that happens to them. Injuries -...

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Edit: ps… at 15 I’d have found an unattended pool to invite friends and *bring beer. * As responsible adult now I’d do everything I can keep past me away...

[Reddit User] − NTA. You and your homeowner's insurance would be impacted if someone drowned in your pool. You absolutely are right to control who uses your backyard pool.

Your SIL and BIL are both entitled in their own ways. If they want to use a pool, you can do it as a family or they can get gym...

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Independent_Tie_4984 − NTA You're facing huge potential liability with a bunch of unknown teenagers using your pool without a responsible adult. The niece that brought over seven other kids was...

You don't owe any of these people the use of your pool when you're not there just because they're related to your husband. Maybe call your home owners insurance while...

put the agent on speaker phone and ask them what they think of giving free access to your pool to other people that may bring other people - while you're...

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Haunting-Juice983 − NTA Remind BIL he can thank SIL for the change in situation

Misstish94 − NTA and truthfully I would send a message to them: "I understand this change is sudden and frustrating but what you are failing to understand is you completely...

Youcan disagree, but you don’t get to decide what is or is not acceptable on my property when I have graciously allowed you all to use what we have worked...

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So, next time someone is doing you a favor, and they ask you to respect their boundaries you should think twice about your response." You don't have to agree with...

Several commenters offered nuanced takes, acknowledging teen independence while upholding the poster’s authority and suggesting compromises.

Foggy_Radish − NTA. It's your ass on the line legally if something happens to someone else's kid (no matter the age) in YOUR pool, whether you are on the premises...

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[Reddit User] − Your SIL doesn't have the first clue how responsible you are if something happens! A kid could literally stub a toe on patio furniture and you get...

(who the hell does that???) SHE lost everybody pool access and the fact that she doubled down about the kids being there alone when you called about it just tells...

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SuperHuckleberry125 − but I'm just kind of over it all together especially since I'm always the one picking up the pool toys and putting patio furniture back and stuff **after...

This right here is definitely the ONLY answer to give when they ask. Because if they CAN'T bother to clean up after themselves while you are generously giving them access...

None of this compares to the LIABILITY of kids under the age of 18 being unsupervised on your property. Talk about complications. Sil can talk all she wants because it's...

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Inform them that using your pool is a privilege that has now been revoked because they took advantage. Until they can realize, acknowledge and apologize for their disrespectful attitude then...

Interesting_Sea_7815 − NTA. 15 year olds can generally go unsupervised, but a pool is different. If they can’t respect your rules, they can’t use the pool. Seems simple enough to...

_A-Q − NTA You: Follow our rules In laws : f__k your rules You: denies access In laws - whaaaaaaaaaa! !!! Ps you have a husband problem if he can’t...

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Light-hearted voices injected humor, poking fun at teen antics and family drama to diffuse the intensity.

LizzyFCB − Uh, you are so sooo NTA. You aren’t running some teenage flophouse! Who wants to come home to a gaggle of unrelated teens exchanging bodily fluids in their...

things are going to get out of hand very quickly. If the in-laws are already acting entitled, imagine how they would behave if an accident happened. The liability would no...

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[Reddit User] − NTA. This is how you get sued. I personally wouldn’t allow anyone to swim if I wasn’t home.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Same rules for all. Then they can't accuse you of singling them out. Might want to install a back yard camera on the pool. You never...

[Reddit User] − NTA. Tell BIL that your hospitality has been exhausted, that you are happy to have people over when you are home, and that he's more than welcome...

extremeeyeroll − NTA. Your SIL broke the rules by allowing her daughter and her daughter’s friends use your pool without supervision. Now everyone suffers and that’s all on them.

The poster enforced a longstanding safety rule after her niece hosted an unsupervised teen pool party, leading to locked gates and family friction over revoked privileges. While liability and disrespect fueled the decision, debates persist on balancing generosity with boundaries in extended families.

Where do you draw the line on sharing home amenities with relatives—safety first, or open-door policy? Have you revoked a family favor that backfired? Share your stories below and vote: NTA or too strict?

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