AITA for switching my skincare and unintentionally making my roommates face flare up?

A 21-year-old woman with normal skin likes to experiment with different skincare products. Her 20-year-old roommate has extremely sensitive skin and is usually very careful about what she puts on her face. They share a bathroom with clearly divided sinks.

After noticing her pricey cleanser disappearing much faster than usual, she discovered her roommate had been using it daily without asking. When confronted, the roommate brushed it off. So the woman replaced it with a new product from a different brand—only for the roommate to wake up with an angry, inflamed rash the next morning and accuse her of deliberate sabotage.

‘AITA for switching my skincare and unintentionally making my roommates face flare up?’

The trouble began when the woman noticed her cleanser vanishing quickly:

I F (21) have pretty normal/ combo skin and I’m not sensitive to much. I also don’t suffer from acne (unless it’s hormonal) and like to switch up my skincare...

My roommate F (20) has extremely sensitive skin and if an ingredient is placed on her skin that she is allergic to or causes a reaction, she gets small clusters...

Due to this, she is very cautious of what is placed on her skin and needs to read each label before using a product. We share one bathroom and have...

On my side, I have a cleanser I use daily (It is a little pricey but I don’t mind spending a bit more on myself when I like a product)...

I noticed it was nearly half gone after two weeks of me buying it (It usually lasts me a month or more) and realized my roommate had been using it...

She addressed the issue directly:

I didn’t have an issue but I felt a little upset she didn’t ask beforehand knowing it was expensive (she made a comment about it after googling it) and not...

that I was being dramatic and that it works for her skin, and has never found something so nice (and continued to use it). I offered to send her the...

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Later, the woman decided to try something new:

As I said I like to use different skincare and cycle-through products. I saw an ad for another brand of skincare and wanted to try it out. I bought the...

I replaced my old cleanser with this one and they had very different packaging (this was in a plastic container my other one was glass and green) and different ingredients....

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The reaction came the next morning:

I didn’t think much of me changing my products like I always do until my roommate woke up the next morning with a severe inflamed rash across her face. Her...

She ran to the bathroom and found out I had changed my cleanser and that was what caused this reaction. She went crazy on me and started yelling at me...

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She said “I knew her skin would react to this” and that I’m a petty b__ch for sabotaging her. She called me a selfish whore and that she won’t be...

She thinks I’m in the wrong because I knew she had sensitivity to certain things (I don’t know exactly what) and did this purposefully. The products are clearly different and...

Shared living spaces require mutual respect for personal property, especially when it comes to health-related items like skincare. Using someone else’s products without permission is a boundary violation—doubly so when the person knows they have sensitivities. The roommate’s failure to ask, replace what she used, or check labels before using a new item shifts responsibility squarely onto her.

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Changing personal products in your own space is a normal part of self-care. No one is obligated to announce routine updates or act as a personal dermatologist for others. The dramatic shift to accusations of sabotage reflects deflection—a common tactic when someone feels caught in the wrong.

Dermatologists frequently emphasize that individuals with reactive skin bear primary responsibility for their own product choices. Dr. Shereene Idriss, a board-certified dermatologist, has noted in interviews that “people with sensitive skin must read ingredient lists every single time—formulations change, even within the same brand.”

The healthiest path forward is clear communication of boundaries (“please don’t use my products”) and, if needed, physical separation of items. Persistent disrespect for personal space and property often signals deeper incompatibility as roommates.

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Check out how the community responded:

The online crowd overwhelmingly sided with the original poster as NTA, pointing out the roommate’s entitlement and lack of caution:

Many highlighted the theft and hypocrisy:

that_jedi_girl - NTA. The nerve of her: stealing from you, and expecting you to cater to her needs as she does so!

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wordsmythy - NTA How did she not notice it was a new and different container? As a thief with sensitive skin, she needs to read the ingredients before thieving. This...

rainyreminder - NTA. It's absolutely hilarious that she could even think she was in the right here. She's a thief!

idontcare8587 - NTA. She was literally stealing your stuff.

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Others emphasized personal responsibility:

SadFr0g - NTA. absolutely NTA. Skincare is a very serious and expensive game, it's baffling to read that a girl with extreme acne issues doesn't understand this. It seems she...

I think her never buying the product on her own after you sent the link somewhat proves this, but I could be wrong. She seems like a lot of work...

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reasonandmadness - NTA It is clear one side is mine and one side is hers.

I brought this up and she brushed it off she didn’t think it was a big deal, that I was being dramatic She went crazy on me and started yelling...

She doesn't respect you. She doesn't respect your things. She has no respect for your arrangement or your personal finances. She's a bad roommate. I've had a few bad roommates...

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Trying to help them to understand how they're hurting you is pointless as they've demonstrated they don't care already. Typically this behavior is internally justified by some unholy offense at...

typically something pitiful like how you moved their dirty socks off the couch, or brought their plate into the kitchen without asking them, something completely natural and normal to balanced...

postcardstocali - NTA. It’s her fault for using something that wasn’t hers.

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Decent_Ad6389 - NTA This is comparable to a lunch bag thief who has an allergic reaction. Not your problem. Not even remotely.

Sparkism - NTA. You'd think she'd look at what she's stealing before swiping it and slathering it on her face.

[Reddit User] - NTA But can you share what the first cleaner was? Sadly I’m a member of the sensitive skin club and I’m always on the hunt for one...

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Aggravating_Ad5756 - NTA - she’s mad because your product that she’s stealing gave her a reaction? She seems careless and selfish and if she’s got such sensitive skin she needs...

Unless you are her dermatologist or her mother, it’s not your job to make sure the products you use will work for her.

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VeryBigPoro - Maybe she learns not to steal in the first place. NTA

jrm1102 - NTA - these were your products, not hers. Its entirely on her.

Algebralovr - NTA WHen you have sensitive skin, you are responsible for making sure you have the products you can use. You don't use other people's products because you don't...

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Sounds to me like she is deflecting because she knows she is in the wrong for using your products without asking, and using it up fast. So OBVOUSLY you changed...

RIGHT /s As someone who is allergic to all the common preservatives used in the beauty industry, I don't use ANYTHING without reading the ingredients. Any time you get a...

If the packaging changes, it DEFINITELY is a sign that there is a change in the product.

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Mundane_Marsupial_61 - NTA It was Your product, YOURS, she shouldn't have used your product to begin with nor should she have used the new stuff without checking the label if...

This skincare mix-up has everyone debating roommate etiquette, personal property, and responsibility for one’s own sensitivities.

What do you think about shared spaces and using others’ belongings? If someone repeatedly took your things without asking, how would you handle it? And when an accident happens because of that, who bears the blame? Share your experiences below!

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