AITA for rating the presents I get for Christmas?
Gift-giving during the holidays is supposed to be about love, thoughtfulness, and joy—not keeping score. Yet one 23-year-old man grew tired of what he saw as generic or low-effort presents from family and friends. To solve the problem, he created a detailed 10-point rating system: he carefully scores every gift he receives based on usefulness, personal applicability, effort, and even applies a “gift card tax,” then logs the numbers in a notebook.
The next year, he matches each person’s previous score by giving them a gift of roughly equal “value.” Everything felt fair and balanced—until Christmas this year, when his girlfriend caught him recording her gift’s 5.6/10 rating right in front of everyone. She called the whole approach cold and transactional; the family agreed it sucked the joy out of the holidays. Now he’s wondering if his system for equality is actually the problem.

‘AITA for rating the presents I get for Christmas?’
A self-described thoughtful giver grows frustrated with generic gifts.


The scoring system aims for perfect fairness.


The system gets exposed and sparks outrage.





Gift-giving is one of the few social rituals still built almost entirely on emotion, intention, and connection—not balance sheets or fairness metrics. By turning presents into a scored transaction, the man removes the very heart of the act: the joy of surprising someone you love, the vulnerability of hoping they’ll like it, and the freedom to give without expecting exact reciprocity. His system, while logical to him, reduces relationships to a ledger where love is measured in points.
What makes the situation more complicated is the public nature of the scoring. Recording ratings in a notebook during the gift exchange—especially when someone’s gift lands a middling 5.6/10—feels like judgment in real time. Even if the intent was fairness, the execution comes across as cold, critical, and joyless. Many people give gifts despite finding the process stressful or expensive; rating those efforts dismisses the emotional labor involved.
The broader perspective here is that relationships thrive on grace, not equivalence. A vacuum cleaner might score low on “fun factor” but high on love if it solves a real problem. Insisting on perfect reciprocity often backfires, turning holidays into audits instead of celebrations. True thoughtfulness means accepting imperfect gifts with gratitude—and giving from the heart without keeping score.
Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:
The overwhelming majority of readers call the system cold, joyless, and deeply off-putting, labeling the poster the clear asshole.











![[Reddit User] − YTA - let’s look at why: - You think you’re a thinker and thoughtful. Are you? You’ve turned present buying into a chore and transaction. - writing...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768186571095-12.webp)



A smaller group questions whether the behavior might stem from neurodivergence while still finding the system problematic.
![[Reddit User] − INFO: Are you on the spectrum? You seem to have a strong need to quantify an activity that has a multitude of variables and nuances. Gift giving...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768186593097-1.webp)


A couple of comments add sharp humor and a final nudge toward rethinking the whole approach.



This story reveals how quickly a well-intentioned quest for fairness can drain the warmth from something as simple and loving as holiday gift-giving. While the desire for reciprocity is understandable, turning presents into a scored transaction misses the deeper point: gifts are expressions of care, not performance reviews.
Have you ever received a gift that wasn’t “perfect” but still meant the world because of who gave it? Do you think gift-giving should involve any kind of unspoken scorecard, or should it always be unconditional? Would you keep using a system like this after seeing how it hurt people? Share your thoughts below.
