WIBTA if I refuse to babysit due to lack of payment??

A young single mom stepped in to help a friend by running an in-home daycare while the friend is on maternity leave. Most families pay promptly, but one parent dropped off their 3-year-old for four days, racked up a $120 bill—and never paid.

Two weeks later, with gentle reminders ignored, they’re planning to bring the child back. The babysitter is ready to refuse drop-off unless paid in full upfront, wondering if that makes her the asshole.

‘WIBTA if I refuse to babysit due to lack of payment??’

The arrangement started as a favor to a friend:

A friend of mine babysits kids in her home daily as her source of income. However she just had a baby last week so I'm currently "subbing" in my home...

It's been mostly great but one of the parents has failed to pay me. I kept there three year old 4 days for what I thought was a more then...

Payment never arrived:

At the end of that week received no payment. The following week they didn't bring her to me however they plan to bring her this week. I've had two conversations...

If they bring her to me would I be the a****** if I refuse to allow them to leave her if they don't pay me at drop off??

I know it's not a lot of money (only $120) but I'm a single mom of two and I'm not really making much money by watching these kids. The amount...

Providing childcare is professional work, not charity—timely payment respects time, effort, and expenses like food and supplies. Licensed or informal, clear policies (upfront or weekly payment) prevent exploitation.

Non-payment signals entitlement; continuing service reinforces it. Business coach Ramit Sethi advises in I Will Teach You to Be Rich that “free work trains people to undervalue you”—requiring payment upfront after delinquency protects income without guilt.

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Single parents especially need reliable earnings. Emotional manipulation (“it’s not much”) ignores the provider’s reality. Professional daycares require payment for drop-off; matching that standard is reasonable, not harsh.

Healthy boundaries include advance notice of policy changes, but urgency here justifies immediate enforcement to avoid further loss.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

The community overwhelmingly declared her NTA, stressing professional boundaries and warning against being taken advantage of:

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Most urged requiring payment upfront and raising rates:

Altruistic_Hurry_389 - NTA. In fact, $30 is WAY undercharging. Near me, daily childcare is $80-100 minimum. You have the right to the money you earn

Fall_Relic - Think of it from their perspective: they found someone to babysit their kid for cheap... If you take this kid again, tell them in no uncertain terms that...

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Frankifile - NTAH, refuse to take the child until they clear up the historical debt and pay in advance... This is your job, your source of income.

sparkvixen - A daycare wouldn't let someone who hasn't paid drop off their kid. This is the same situation... I'd tell them you require up-front payment going forward due to...

appleblossom1962 - NTA. Tell them you need past your payment now and in the future, you need payment daily when they drop the child off.

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DazzlingPotion - I tell them before they come that you’re going to need payment for what they owe you AND payment up front... Plus you’re charging an insanely low price...

[Reddit User] - NTA I would definitely require payment in advance... If they say “it isnt a lot of money” the response is “then you should be able to pay...

evildicemonkey - NTA. No one should work for free.

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[Reddit User] - Nta. It's basic business... But I think you ought to tell them before they come... Also, I'd ask your friend... how financials work with those clients.

Ilovekebapsomuch - They are 100% taking advantage of you... You definitely shouldn't babysit without getting paid first and also increasing your price.

browneyedredhead1968 - Nta. Message them that they will need to pay what they owe plus pay daily at drop off

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No_Stranger7804 - WNBTA. You shouldn't take any new jobs from them until they pay you for the last one.

International-Fee255 - NTA Tell them it's payment upfront, don't accept anything less than the full amount.

lucyloochi - Do they not pay your friend either?

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This childcare payment standoff has everyone nodding at the importance of valuing your own work and setting firm lines early.

If someone repeatedly delays payment for your services, how do you decide when “understanding” turns into being taken for granted? What role does clear communication—like upfront policies—play in preventing these situations? And when money feels “not a lot” to one side but essential to the other, how do you bridge that gap fairly? Share your experiences or advice below!

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