AITA for being uncomfortable about my fiancée driving 30 miles away to spend the night with a coworker she just met?

A 30-year-old woman felt uneasy when her fiancée announced plans to drive 30 miles for an overnight stay at a new coworker’s empty house—to give her a ride to work the next day. She suggested alternatives like bringing the coworker home, but was dismissed as “insecure and jealous.”

They’re both women, engaged, and have been arguing lately. The coworker, known only eight weeks, suddenly needed this favor on a night her kids were away. The refusal to compromise escalated into a fight, with the fiancée leaving anyway, leaving her partner hurt and questioning trust in a same-sex relationship context.

‘AITA for being uncomfortable about my fiancée driving 30 miles away to spend the night with a coworker she just met?’

The new job brought quick friendship, but boundaries blurred fast:

We are gay. Both female. Both 30. She got a job two months ago and made a friend pretty quick which was nice for her. They text all the time...

The other day she says “hey, H needs a ride to work to I’m going to drive to (town 30 miles away) and sleep over. Her kids are gone for...

Concerns focused on practicality and recent tensions, not infidelity:

I said, “could you maybe just go get H and bring her to our house since you both work close to our house. She can stay in the spare room.”

She said, “no. I want to go spend the night and if you’re uncomfortable then you’re just being insecure and jealous”

I said, “it’s not about that at all. We are 30. She is 26. You’ve known her for 8 weeks. I trust you. I’m not thinking that you’d cheat or...

Now all of the sudden she needs you to spend the night while her kids are away? I am uncomfortable because we have been arguing lately and this seems like...

Why would you want to stay at a stranger’s house when it’s just unnecessary and your partner is uncomfortable? I am uncomfortable with this. There is a perfectly good compromise...

ADVERTISEMENT

She left anyway and said that I’m crazy and insecure. I am BEYOND hurt. I feel betrayed. We are adults. Who has sleepovers like this? If we were a hetero...

and my boyfriend wanted to stay at his female coworker house under these same circumstances I feel like EVERYone would think he is a completely a__hole.. Please tell me if...

Boundaries in relationships evolve with trust and time—eight weeks is early for overnights with someone unknown to the partner, especially during arguments. Dismissing discomfort as “insecurity” avoids addressing valid concerns like safety, practicality, and emotional needs.

ADVERTISEMENT

Same-sex couples face similar dynamics as opposite-sex ones; gender doesn’t erase red flags like defensiveness or prioritizing a new friend over compromise. The empty house and timing amplify suspicion, even without assuming cheating—escaping tension via a “sleepover” feels avoidant.

Healthy partners discuss feelings without accusation, exploring why one needs space and why the other feels uneasy. Therapy (mentioned in edit) can unpack this, distinguishing insecurity from intuition.

Refusal here protects emotional safety; insisting despite hurt risks resentment. Open communication, not ultimatums, builds security—both sides deserve empathy amid recent strains.

ADVERTISEMENT

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Redditors overwhelmingly said NTA, spotting red flags in the defensiveness and odd logistics:

Many flagged it as suspicious or disrespectful:

Thrwforksandknives - NTA. Driving 30 miles to stay with a friend at her house when you (her S. O) have offered the spare room. That's definitely a red flag right...

ADVERTISEMENT

And yes, I'd say in the very least she gets attached to people very quickly, and there is a reasonable suspicion that something intimate is going on.

pepper_puppy - NTA. Sleeping over at another adult's house is very weird. Especially a new coworker. Especially when their house is going to be empty.

The fact that your SO got really defensive when you expressed your discomfort is a huge red flag too. Is this typical for her communication? EDIT: the context behind this...

ADVERTISEMENT

Wanp97 - NTA She said, “no. I want to go spend the night and if you’re uncomfortable then you’re just being insecure and jealous” Tbh this sounds like her playing...

Filitass - Your SO sounds pretty unreasonable. Yes, one could argue you are insecure and what not, but even if it were like that, that would be all the more...

You are 30, not 15. You also offered a perfectly fine compromise, it is closer to work, you have a spare room. There is absolutely no (apparent) reason to spend...

ADVERTISEMENT

Her blowing up when you questioned the motives, insisting on spending the night there (with the kids gone) and insulting you on top of that makes it seem like something...

You voiced your concerns and instead of coming back to you and talk about it, she used it as a weapon against you. Mental manipulation much, and it worked because...

You are NTA. Don't question yourself, you did everything right. You voiced your concerns but you stayed calm, reasonable and gave a fine compromise.

ADVERTISEMENT

Inflatedcat - Why was it so important for her to strain your relationship for the sake of giving a lift to someone she had known for 8 weeks? We can...

Uber / Taxi Use the same solution she had before your girlfriend came into the picture

- Make alternative arrangements with her children

ADVERTISEMENT

- Sleep over at your place

- Why was it so important for your girlfriend to solve this problem?

- Why did she not sit down and discuss it calmly with you?

ADVERTISEMENT

- Why didn’t she want to have her friend sleep over?

Why didn’t she take your feelings into consideration? Is this the kind of relationship you want? The lack of respect, lack of consideration and lack of communication coupled with prioritization...

ashhole502 - NTA. I'm bi, so gender is irrelevant to me. Multiple issues here - 1. You two haven't been in a good place. It would be one thing if...

ADVERTISEMENT

2. The way she snapped at you was a huge red flag. She was defensive without you implying or accusing anything. I would definitely be worried.

foulbachelorlife - NTA. She's definitely cheating on you

caitlinjoym - NTA - That was a decent compromise, and you expressed that you were uncomfortable with it. She should of respected that.

ADVERTISEMENT

[Reddit User] - She said, “no. I want to go spend the night and if you’re uncomfortable then you’re just being insecure and jealous” Uhhhhhhhhhhhhh. .. if this isn't a...

I am uncomfortable because we have been arguing lately Oh, that's even bigger red flag. I think you got bigger worries than feeling uncomfortable. You need to reevaluate this relationship....

ADVERTISEMENT

Margot-hates-me - NTA. That's not normal behavior or expectations in any universe. Only two reasons to do that: she's banging the coworker or wants to bang the coworker. Hope you're...

[Reddit User] - NTA, and anyone who turns your concerns back on you by saying it’s your fault for being jealous and insecure is definitely an a__hole. I’ve been on...

aestep1014 - NTA. This sounds super fishy. I'd also be concerned for her safety. Please tell her if she needs anything at all to call or text. ..just in case...

ADVERTISEMENT

Icebolt08 - NTA She left anyway and said that I’m crazy and insecure. This is some pretty unhealthy "turning the table"/dismissive behavior IMO. it can be bureaucratic, but I think...

You offered two (or more) rational compromises, compromises that continued to suit a need to getting away; she didn't take on it so I'm leaning that's not the issue, or...

** Have either of you seen H's kids in person or a video of H referring to the as her kids in video? I find it very conspicuous that the...

ADVERTISEMENT

8wks of work (working half the time) is 160hrs, or 10 full days (8 hrs sleep). Your SO is staying with someone they've known for a little more than a...

I'm not trying to pull a scare tactic but I don't see how this is a rational decision. We just don't know H. And you don't go with strangers to...

I hope you and your SO stay together, but more importantly, I hope y'all are safe.

ADVERTISEMENT

[Reddit User] - Coming into this from the perspective of a straight man. If my fiance wanted to drive 30 miles to spend the night with a man she hasn't...

I would also be upset. What's to hide? Why can't he stay here? Why not go out all of us together? Does this make me insecure? Yes. Does it make...

Is there anything wrong with that? No. They raised the red flags, not you. NTA.

ManateeFlamingo - NTA Her behavior is very strange. Listen to your gut.

She expressed discomfort calmly with compromises, but her fiancée doubled down and left—drawing near-universal support for trusting instincts amid defensiveness.

Relationships thrive on mutual respect; dismissing boundaries as “jealousy” erodes trust, especially early with new friends. Would you accept a similar overnight from your partner without question, or expect discussion? When does needing space cross into disregard for the relationship?

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *