AITA for not wanting to sleep in our bed?

A new father has spent the last three months sleeping on the sofa because sharing a queen bed with his wife, their 3-month-old baby, and his 3-year-old stepdaughter has become unbearable. With a demanding 12-hour physical job, he needs real rest, but the crowded bed, a restless toddler, and a TV left on all night leave him no choice.

What makes the story more complicated is his wife’s firm insistence on co-sleeping with both children despite having safer options like a bedside crib and a toddler bed. She calls him an asshole for abandoning the “family bed,” while he sees the couch as the only way to stay functional for work and the household.

‘AITA for not wanting to sleep in our bed?’

Life changed dramatically after the baby arrived three months ago.

I’ve (33M) have refused to sleep in our bed. Hear me out here. My wife (27F) is a stay at home mom. She had a daughter (3 now) when we...

That was fine with me and I got used to co sleeping with her, she has her own bed but refuses to sleep in her room at night, only for...

When I get home I cook for our family (her cooking is HORRIBLE, she’d burn water), spend a few hours with them and then straighten up around the house before...

Co-sleeping expanded to include the newborn, crowding the bed further.

Since our 3 month old was born, my wife has insisted on co sleeping with her as well. We have a bed side pivoting crib but she refuses to use...

She also refuses to break the co sleeping with the 3 year old. I’ve even brought the toddler bed into our room to try to get her to sleep in...

This being said, with me there are 4 people in a queen sized bed. The 3 year is a ROUGH sleeper and will end up sideways in the bed and...

The uncomfortable setup pushed him to the sofa for survival.

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So on the occasion I do sleep in our bed I have just enough room to lay sideways on the edge of the bed (I’m not a small guy) and...

neither of which are good since there is a 3 month old in the bed. I’ve sleeping on the sofa for the most of the past 3 months, even if...

I get the sleep I need for work and I still wake up if the 3 month old is crying. She says I’m an a__hole for not sleeping in bed...

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This conflict centers on differing parenting philosophies and the practical realities of sleep deprivation in a high-stakes job. The husband prioritizes safety, rest, and long-term independence for the children, while the wife clings to co-sleeping, possibly linked to her night terrors or attachment style. His contributions—cooking, cleaning, and full financial support—add weight to his need for proper recovery.

Critics might argue that new parents often sacrifice sleep and he should endure temporary discomfort for family bonding. Some view co-sleeping as a valid cultural or personal choice when done safely. However, medical guidelines strongly discourage bed-sharing with infants due to suffocation risks, and prolonged co-sleeping with toddlers can create dependency that becomes harder to break later.

On a broader level, society grapples with evolving sleep norms: attachment parenting promotes closeness, yet experts emphasize independent sleep skills for child development and parental well-being. Unilateral decisions about shared spaces ignore partnership equity, especially when one spouse bears the income burden. Compromise—transitioning the toddler, using the crib, or turning off the TV—could preserve intimacy without endangering health or sanity.

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Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many users sided firmly with the father, calling the wife’s refusal to compromise unreasonable and potentially harmful.

cyfermax − NTA. Not teaching the 3 year old to sleep alone makes her TA. Knowing that you need to sleep for work, but still insisting that the bed also...

Refusing to bend even a little to make your life easier makes her TA. Telling you off for sleeping on the couch when she does nothing to make it better...

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Kids and caring for kids is important, but so are you, so is your relationship, and she's allowing, and enforcing, you to suffer to get her own way. She's an...

Dwro1234 − NTA. In fact she is. Co sleeping is terrible. Cue the downvotes and comments about it not being my business and blah blah blah. Cosleeping is terrible, period....

creates dependency issues, lack of boundaries, which may result in discipline issues later down the line etc. Put your foot down, get your bed back. Your bed is for you...

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throw-chimney-sweep − NTA that sounds like a h__eous sleeping situation. If you're not a small guy the couch can't be too lux either. Why is your wife so adamant about...

panicattackcity91 − NTA I’m a mother myself and I honestly think co sleeping should be a decision made by both parents,

but I have to say co sleeping with a baby is dangerous and irresponsible, the amount of deaths caused by this every year is very high so I still don’t...

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I’m guessing as your partner has night terrors she’s been through a traumatic event (I suffer with ptsd and have night terrors), my guess from that is it isn’t a...

and is more your partner using the children as a comforter of sorts which isn’t healthy at all for the children or for her. My children used to sleep with...

but the only way I’d let them sleep with me is if they also were more than happy to sleep in their own bed. My sister cosleeps with my nephew...

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My nephew is 8 now and freaks out at the thought of sleeping on his own, he cries when she leaves him etc he has to be near her always.

If your partner is unwilling to acknowledge the reasons you don’t like co sleeping then she has no right to call you an a__hole.

I’d advise partner see a therapist to sort her issues from her past so she can have a healthy relationship with her children.

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[Reddit User] − NTA 3 years old is old enough to have their own bed. And cosleeping is not advised. I totally get it if the baby absolutely will not...

but you really should be using the crib. It's unsafe until the kid has good neck strength and is strong enough to roll over.

FW-190A-9 − NTA. You need that sleep for your job. If you get fired, the whole family would be without income.

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Several offered more nuanced views, urging communication and gradual change while still supporting his choice.

ollyator − NTA. Her unwillingness to compromise or even discuss putting an end to co-sleeping has pushed you out of the room. You need to be able to rest and...

dart1126 − NTA. This should not be her unilateral decision about the family bed situation. Since she is making it hers alone, you have the right to say I am...

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She should really reconsider this and have moved the three-year-old out before even having the baby at some point this is going to have to happen with a toddler,

and the toddler will resent the baby as she will see she needs to move out to make room for this baby. It still needs to be done but now...

In terms of both jealousy of the baby but also because the older she gets the harder it gets so learn this lesson and have the baby out at a...

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Your wife is a stay at home parent she gets plenty of quality time with them she doesn’t have to give them sleep anxiety if they can’t not be in...

It’s wonderful she’s very attached to them and that is a great bond but you have just proven how it can be too much and to their own detriment if...

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She doesn’t work outside the home . ...she has to understand and appreciate you need to get a good nigh’s sleep and you are supporting the family financially.

Maybe suggest if you can’t sleep well she may have to consider going to work see how fast that shuts things down. Her completely dismissing your opinions and needs is...

A few added practical or light-hearted suggestions to ease the tension.

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[Reddit User] − NTA I despise co-sleeping. My brother only just in the past couple years started sleeping in his own bed because my mom and step dad enabled the...

CraftyMommaFish − NTA - you need your sleep too and it sounds like you're trying to keep the other occupants safe. Your bedroom environment sounds like very little sleep would...

Maybe it's time to get a double or queen bed "for the toddler" so that you can have a regular bed to sleep on in that kid's room.

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The social network overwhelmingly declares the father not the asshole, emphasizing his need for rest, the safety risks of bed-sharing with an infant, and the wife’s lack of compromise. Sleeping on the couch emerges as a reasonable self-preservation move rather than abandonment.

Co-sleeping debates never fail to divide parents—some swear by the bonding benefits, others warn of long-term dependency and danger. At what age should kids transition to their own beds? How do couples fairly decide sleep arrangements when one partner works grueling hours? Have you dealt with co-sleeping battles or found creative compromises? Share your stories below.

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