AITA for finally asking for the apartment back after my niece’s “temporary” stay turned into four years?
An adult child living with aging parents finally snapped after waiting four years for the top-floor apartment in the family home—space originally promised to her for privacy while caregiving. Instead, her niece moved in “temporarily” and never left, even starting to bring over dates the OP wants nothing to do with.
She politely texted her niece asking to start planning a move, emphasizing no rush but needing her own place. The request blew up: niece told her mom, who told the parents, and suddenly everyone painted the OP as selfish for disrupting the status quo.

‘AITA for finally asking for the apartment back after my niece’s “temporary” stay turned into four years?’
The parents own a three-unit house, with the OP on the main floor with them, sister on the second, and niece on the top—which was meant for the OP:


The OP stayed quiet to avoid conflict, but she’s the primary caregiver:



Family dating patterns have caused past fallout:


The family reacted poorly:


She clarifies boundaries and options:





Multi-generational living works best with clear agreements and mutual respect. The original promise of the apartment tied directly to caregiving responsibilities—privacy in exchange for proximity and support. Allowing indefinite occupation by another family member undermines that deal, breeding resentment when one person shoulders disproportionate load.
Family dynamics often favor avoiding conflict over fairness, positioning the accommodating one (here, the OP) as “difficult” for finally speaking up. The niece’s financial independence makes her stay convenient rather than necessary, shifting caregiving expectations unfairly. Parents enabling this risks losing the child most invested in their well-being.
Boundaries around guests are reasonable, especially when shared spaces trigger past trauma or discomfort. Texting directly skipped parental authority (since they own the property), but frustration after years of silence is understandable. Better approaches involve calm family meetings outlining contributions and timelines.
Long-term, the OP must prioritize self-preservation. Reducing caregiving or moving out forces reevaluation—parents may then enforce the original plan or recruit others. Therapy helps process guilt around “abandoning” family while reclaiming autonomy. No one owes indefinite sacrifice for ungrateful dynamics.
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
Most users side firmly with the OP being NTA for asking, while strongly recommending she move out and withdraw caregiving to force change:

















A few criticize the approach or call ESH for bypassing parents:













The overwhelming advice: NTA for asking, but the only real leverage is withdrawing caregiving and moving out—forcing the family to confront who actually supports the parents.
These enmeshed family home disputes always boil down to unspoken favors and guilt—who gets privacy when everyone “needs” something? Is staying to care worth permanent second-place status, or does going low-contact finally earn the respect long overdue?
