AITA for not letting my MIL come over unsupervised?

A guy about to tie the knot is dealing with a serious headache: his fiancée’s mother has a long history of barging into their privacy, and now she desperately wants to housesit alone while they’re on their honeymoon. The couple has been together eleven years and is finally getting married after delays from the pandemic and a pregnancy.

The future mother-in-law seems sweet at first glance, but her constant “helping” has gone way too far from throwing out sentimental items and listening to voicemails to rummaging through intimate drawers. She’s even blasted private news like fertility struggles and the pregnancy across social media without permission. Now, with the honeymoon approaching, he flat-out refuses to let her stay unsupervised, despite family pressure making his fiancée second-guess the decision.

‘AITA for not letting my MIL come over unsupervised?’

It all kicked off with unwanted “help” when Jen had a spare key:

In August my fiancé (“Emily”, 35F) and I (33M) will be tying the knot. We were going to last year but with the pandemic and then a pregnancy everything had...

frankly I’d settle for running down to the courthouse at this point. We’ve been together for eleven years, but had wanted to get settled before getting married. I love my...

but they’re a lot more... involved than I’m used to family being. Emily’s mom, “Jen”, is the worst offender by far though. The crux of the issue is Emily and...

Emily and I are already decided, but she’s getting pushback from her family and having doubts. My reasons: Jen used to have a spare key to our house and she...

and checked our voicemail and would leave notes) and check on our dog while we were at work. I frequently told her to stop, but she seemed to take it...

She didn’t quit, even showing up when the OP was home alone:

She didn’t, however, and did it two more times. Once while I was home alone showering and came to find her in our living room. The other time I came...

Our underwear drawer (!!!) was open, as was our bedside table. After that, Emily and I took away her key, changed the locks, and that seemed to be the end...

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During their struggles to conceive, private details got spread around:

When Emily and I were trying for a baby, we had a lot of difficulty, and Emily confided that in her sister. Who then told Jen, and soon Jen was...

To make it infinitely worse, when we did finally conceive, despite being told not to, she posted to Facebook, mass texts, you name it. She was just trying to help...

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She even meddled in wedding plans her own way:

She’s also tried to help with the wedding twice: buying us a cake- flavors and design of her choosing, though she did try to get something to Emily’s tastes- and...

She backed down when told no, but still makes jokes about wasting that money. Jen is an otherwise sweet woman, but she doesn’t listen. I don’t trust her in my...

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The core issue here is a future mother-in-law repeatedly violating the couple’s privacy, even after clear warnings. Actions like rummaging through intimate drawers, eavesdropping on voicemails, or sharing personal news online show a blatant disregard for personal space—something vital in any relationship, especially family ties.

From the opposing side, family members argue Jen is just showing love through help, and refusing her makes her feel criminalized. They might see the couple as overly harsh toward an older relative who only wants to care. In some cultures, parents are expected to stay deeply involved in adult children’s lives, so drawing lines can come off as ungrateful.

Still, psychologists point out this goes beyond help—it’s often control in disguise. Dr. Ramani Durvasula, an expert on toxic relationships, notes in her work that boundary-crossers frequently hide behind “I just want what’s best” while feeding their own need to dominate. Jen’s persistence after direct no’s proves she hasn’t shifted.

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For practical fixes, stick firm: no solo access. Board the dog, hire pros, or trust a friend instead. The couple must stay united against family pressure—Emily can remind her mom these choices stem from past breaches. A calm, direct talk (maybe with a counselor) could help Jen grasp the impact. Long-term, security cameras or alarms offer peace of mind.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

People online are solidly backing the groom, flooding with comments defending his stance.

Plenty stress Jen’s had chances but blown them, making the refusal totally justified:

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ExactingRook2822 - NTA - It is your home, that means your rules. If you don’t want her there anymore then that it absolutely acceptable. She has a history of not...

Parking-Fix-8143 - As I see it, she HAS had a chance to change, but hasn't. She ignores boundaries, esp. her daughter's, and yours. This won't stop until you give her...

She might be a sweet woman otherwise, but she still tries to step over your boundaries. Stand your ground, physically and emotionally.

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Some offer straightforward alternatives to avoid the drama altogether:

Dududidu2 - NTA. I don’t understand the conflict though. The dog goes to a kennel and you lock up the house. Stick with your plan - she doesn’t have to...

marjomind - NTA, and if I were you I'd choose someone outside (her) family & family friends to housesit for you and Emily. If housesitting is necessary then choose a...

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A few bring sharp humor, labeling the “helping” as sneaky control:

WantToBeACyborg - NTA The road to Hell may be paved with good intentions, but the Bus to Hell is driven by "I was just trying to help. " MIL needs...

Others suggest beefing up security just in case:

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Swedishpunsch - Jen is not a "sweet woman," she's got the hide of a rhino. Kennel the dog, and look into getting a home security system with an alarm that...

Make sure that Emily doesn't give her the code. This woman is going to keep pushing until something scares her off - like the cops. Cameras would be a nice...

Deeper comments warn that giving in only reinforces bad habits:

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certified_mom_friend - In your explanation you said MIL feels like you "treat her like a criminal". .. but the thing is, she's gone into your house multiple times without permission...

Letting her come in and enabling the snooping/meddling again would teach her that her behavior is acceptable and that you'll keep letting her pull that crap if she whines enough.

[Reddit User] - NTA. Keep those boundaries up. If you don’t it will continue indefinitely. You also, need to watch what information you share with all of your in laws...

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(you cant expect the others to have the same boundaries you two have). Have a plan. Know it’s being handled by someone else. Share that information. You will save yourself...

santafe354 - NTA. The problem is not that she’s just like this, but that you asked her to change, and she either refused or is unable to.

Giving her another chance is not going to change her behavior. The only other possibility is to have a conversation with her, in which you ask her why she is...

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Not let’s try again, but why. If she’s able to give an insightful answer, you might offer her one more opportunity. But I wouldn’t count on her ability to change....

Diddleymazzz - I have to say I don’t think she’s changed just not being allowed to interfere. She would still be doing it if she could. Her head is in...

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In future you are only allowed to do things we ask you to do. If she’s so desperate to keep busy she should start voluntary work of some sort.

[Reddit User] - NTA - It would be one thing if she had never done anything to make you question her, but in this case she has already proven that...

farsighted451 - NTA. She shows she has "changed" by long-term changes to her behavior, not by getting free access to someone else's home.

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The fact that she's enlisted flying monkeys to berate you and your wife about the lock change already tells you that she hasn't stopped. Can you imagine throwing a fit...

Getting other family members in on the argument about how you should be allowed to housesit? Guilting your child about allowing you to housesit? Why is it so important to...

TogarSucks - NTA. I also have some family members who do inappropriate things under the guise of “being helpful”. I set boundaries with them which they don’t understand,

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but I really don’t care if they do. They know that if they break them more boundaries will go up or contact will be reduced or cut off completely. That...

Honestly I think it’s generational. Baby Boomers will never look at millenials or adult Gen Zers as anything other than children, so they feel that gives them the right to...

The_Final_Analysis - NTA Quit insisting Jen is "an otherwise sweet woman" because she's NOT. She's a nosy, controlling woman who refuses to acknowledge after ELEVEN YEARS that you

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and Emily are adults who are entitled to your privacy and autonomy. She snoops because she wants to find out what you're doing so SHE can stick in her two...

..because no-one is as smart/perfect/experienced as Jen. You've already told Jen you don't want her house sitting so that's it. It's NOT up for discussion. "

Jen, we've already told you that we have the situation handled. There is no need to revisit our plans. " Getting pushback from the family: "Our house-sitting is not your...

We already have plans in place, Jen is well aware of that. " Make sure your actual house sitter knows NOT to let Jen in under any circumstances for any...

Normal-Height-8577 - NTA. Point out to Jen that you did give her a chance to show she'd changed, and she blew it. Twice. That's why you took her key away....

The fact she can't keep her mouth shut on social media and keeps trying to make decisions for you with the wedding planning all makes it only too clear that...

This whole situation highlights how crucial it is to guard your personal space in family dynamics, especially with a track record of oversteps. Even if Jen means well, her actions have shattered trust, and the couple is well within their rights to choose who enters their home.

What do you think—would you give a relative who’s crossed lines before another shot, or is keeping distance the smarter move? Have you dealt with a nosy in-law like this? Drop your own stories in the comments!

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