AITA for expecting my husband to sleep in our kids room?

Raising a big blended family sounds rewarding, but when one parent carries the full load of broken sleep for years, resentment builds fast. This stay-at-home mom has been the go-to for nighttime kid duties forever, while her husband enjoyed his own space and now clings to the shared bed despite his loud snoring wrecking her rest.

She’s at her limit, asking him to crash in their toddler’s room on work nights just so she can catch some unbroken sleep—something she’s barely had in 15 years. Social media users jumped in with strong takes, from sympathy for her exhaustion to questions about how they got here in the first place.

AITA for expecting my husband to sleep in our kids room?

The sleepless nights trace back 15 years for this dedicated mom.

I (36f) have handled kids through the night for 15 years. I have 2 kids from before my now husband (31m), he had 2, and we have 2 together. We...

I’ve never had good sleepers. My two oldest are diagnosed ADHD and I know my 4-year-old will be. Since my firstborn, I’ve woken up many times a night to handle...

Things shifted during the pandemic with a new baby on the way.

In 2020, I became pregnant with my son with my husband and became a SAHM due to covid. I began sleeping separately from him due to different sleep patterns, moving...

My husband had his own room, bed, gaming computer, collectibles, his “bachelor pad.”. Later, our baby and I moved into another room, bed sharing. My husband still had his own...

Another pregnancy followed soon after.

In 2022, I became pregnant with our daughter. Again, I was in a room with my toddler and baby, him still in his own room.

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Space issues forced changes by 2024.

By 2024, we had to split our teen girls into separate rooms, which put my husband, me, and our 2 toddlers in one room.

He didn’t want to lose his space, so we built a false wall half for his gaming/collectibles, and all shared a big bed. I still handled the kids since he...

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He eventually wanted a bed alone with me, so I convinced him to give up his side and add a bed. Unfortunately, he developed bad snoring.

We’ve tried solutions, but he won’t follow through on a sleep study. I often kick him out so I can sleep.

A bigger home brought new hopes, but old problems linger.

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We’ve since moved to a bigger home. Our toddlers share a room (4-year-old sleeps decently, 2-year-old still ends up with me). I haven’t had good sleep in 15 years.

I’ve asked him to sleep in our daughter’s bed on work nights so I can rest. He won’t. He sometimes sleeps on the couch but usually stays until I kick...

I also have to wake at 5:15am to make sure he’s up for work, which keeps me up for at least another hour. I struggle with sleep anyway, often lying...

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Tonight, I was awoken at 3am after not sleeping until 1am. Still awake at 4:15, knowing 5am alarms are coming. AITA for expecting him to sleep in our daughter’s bed...

Should I be the one? To me, one person in a twin makes more sense than me and a toddler sharing one.

TLDR: AITA for expecting my husband to sleep in our toddler’s bed due to his snoring so I can get decent sleep? I’m a SAHM who shared rooms with kids...

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Chronic sleep deprivation hits hard, especially for the primary caregiver in a large family where one partner’s untreated snoring adds nightly disruption. The mom’s years of solo night duty stem from practical choices like co-sleeping for easier soothing, common with restless kids, but it creates long-term habits tough to break.

Her husband benefits from better rest while working, yet resists compromises that could balance things, like temporary separate sleeping to address his snoring. Relationship therapist Esther Perel observes, “The quality of our relationships determines the quality of our lives,” highlighting how uneven loads erode connection over time. Start with him committing to that sleep study—snoring often signals apnea, fixable with treatment for everyone’s benefit.

Set clear boundaries: stop waking him; adults handle their alarms, freeing her from extra interruptions. Explore sleep training gently for the toddler to encourage independent nights, perhaps with professional guidance. Ultimately, teamwork means sharing burdens creatively—separate rooms permanently if needed—so both parents stay healthy and present.

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Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Several users zeroed in on the unfairness, backing the mom while calling out bigger issues.

Disastrous-Nail-640 − NTA And why tf are you getting up to make sure he’s awake? Is he not a grown ass adult? Just stop.

[Reddit User] − "Hey darling, this weekend I'll be staying in a hotel for the night and you are on parenting duty. I need a good night's sleep before i...

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Lazy-General332 − NTA. Your husband probably has sleep apnea which is why he can’t get up. This is his problem. Stop waking him and let him feel the consequences of...

You are putting yourself at risk of so many health problems by not sleeping. Sleep is a necessity- not a luxury. This is deeply unfair to you. He is putting...

I have sleep apnea and use a C-pap. My partner was able to sleep when I snored but then I stopped breathing for short spells and that freaked him out.

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I got the sleep test, got the C-pap and now we both sleep better. I hate the C-pap but I hate not breathing properly even more, so…. You can tell...

Kitastrophe8503 − I also have to wake at 5:15am to make sure he’s up for work, I'm sorry, what in the actual hell did you just say? NTA. I don't...

Tell that man to get his s__t together before i ooze through the computer screen like a horror monster and start causing the trouble someone needs to in your house.

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Others pointed fingers both ways, suggesting shared responsibility in the setup.

oop_norf − I also have to wake at 5:15am to make sure he’s up for work Aside from all the rest of the general wtf-ery here, absolutely WTF is *this*?...

I can't help but feel that you have taken a series of quite deliberate choices over an extended period of time to completely s__ew yourself over and now you're sad...

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ESH you and he have created an unviable living situation for yourselves through a combination of not having enough space, and/or having too many children, and by a ridiculous division...

You're right that it doesn't work, but that doesn't get you off the hook - this isn't something he did to you, you did it together.

PhotoForward2499 − ESH - you started this, no? You started letting children sleep with you all over the place. Literally your entire timeline has you sleeping with this one

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or that one, or some of them @\_@ Now I don’t have any kids with ADHD, but even puppies can be trained to sleep alone thru the night. (not calling...

Yes, I feel very bad for a fellow sleep deprived woman, and I also think your husband should do something, literally ANYTHING to help you get some sleep even if...

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But you are mad at him for drawing his own boundaries and sticking to them, which you should have drawn for yourself and never did.

weirwoodheart − ESH. Why have you both chosen to live in houses where you don't have enough bedrooms for the children you have?

Honestly you both deserve this, although his immature attitude of you needing to wake his grown up ass so he can go to work does give him extra AH.

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A handful added practical tips or sharper critiques to round out the views.

HappyHouseplant02 − I'm sorry but why the hell do you guys keep adding more children to the mix? Especially when you have a useless husband?

ServelanDarrow − ESH.   I could barely follow this.   People can just sleep in their own beds.

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South_Industry_1953 − \ I also have to wake at 5:15am to make sure he’s up for work No, really, you don't. He's an adult, he gets himself up or is...

When you are both home, you *both* are responsible for the children and the home and should divide what gets done equally.

He is not your helper; he is a parent on his own as much as you are. If you two cannot sleep well in the same room / bed, you...

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Married couples do not have to share one sleeping room if they prefer not to. No one should sleep in a toddler bed who is not a toddler. NTA, but...

debbiewardx − YTA. You've done all of this to yourself. You made your life the misery it is.

Irisorchid07 − **Please please please read OPs post history before giving advice** There are some HUGE things going on in OPs life that are all HOT MESSES.

They got to this point making terrible decisions and it continues via Poor finances Opening their marriage (yeah). She wrote she has a regular FWB.

Having baby fever (silliness) All posted within the last month Good advice is a waste of everyone's time. These people enjoy living in drama and will continue to do so.

TrainingDearest − ESH. This is a disaster of your own making. The co-sleeping and sharing of rooms with the children stands out as poor parenting choices that were destined to...

Be a decent Parent: teach your children to sleep alone in their own bed. BILLIONS of kiddos do this every night, so there's NO REASON why your children cannot.

This is a You Problem. Beyond that, No - your husband does not have to give up his bed or his bedroom and sleep in the child's bed so that...

He does need to follow up with the sleep study thing: his snoring is a His Problem which is adversely affecting others -and it's his responsibility to correct it.

That would be the reason he should sleep elsewhere (Sofa yes, child's room NO), but not so that you can have your child in your bed.

Shellbell-AITAReader − Invest in some ear plugs, a good child/toddler sleep consultant and a back bone. YOU do not need to get up at 5.15. My husband gets up way...

and is quiet and respectful- I’d be ready to k__l him if he bashed around the house at 5.15 am and woke me up before my alarm goes off at...

Also the sleep consultant will sort your bed sharing with your kids out - this is not a bad thing generally EXCEPT it’s clearly not working for you as your...

MaxeyTaxi − NTA for wanting more help. But I don’t understand why all the children need someone in there sleeping with them though? You do this, it trains them to...

This tale underscores how uneven parenting loads, especially around sleep, can strain even committed partnerships in big families. While the mom’s exhaustion is totally valid after years of solo nights, some see shared choices in housing and habits contributing too. Finding balance might mean medical fixes, new routines, or just better boundaries all around. How would you handle sleep chaos in a bustling household like this?

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