AITA for hiring help to do the chores I agreed to take on in our marriage?

Marriage often comes with compromises, especially when two people earn very different incomes. In this case, one couple thought they had found a system that worked. He would cover all the bills, and she would manage the home. On paper, it sounded balanced. In reality, things became far more complicated once real life entered the picture. The wife works full-time as an architect, a career she loves, but she quickly realized that handling every household chore on top of her job left her drained.

Her solution was practical: use her own money to hire help so everything still runs smoothly. Clean house, fresh meals, folded laundry. Yet instead of relief, her husband reacted with anger. When she shared her dilemma on social media, readers focused less on the chores themselves and more on what her husband’s reaction might reveal about power, expectations, and control within their marriage.

AITA for hiring help to do the chores I agreed to take on in our marriage?

The agreement seemed straightforward when they first got married

I (27F) have been married to my husband (32M) for a year. He’s incredibly successful and makes significantly more money than I do. I work full-time as an architect (not...

When we got married, we agreed that he’d handle all the bills, and I’d take care of the housework which includes cooking, cleaning, laundry, etc.

She quickly realized that the reality of the arrangement was more exhausting than expected

Basically a modernized housewife dynamic, except I still work because I love my career. Now, here’s the thing: I suck at being a housewife. I don’t enjoy cooking or cleaning,...

So instead of burning myself out, I decided to use my own money from work to hire a housekeeper who comes in a few times a week and a meal...

From her perspective, the results were exactly what they had agreed on

Everything still gets done the house is spotless, my husband always has clean clothes, and meals are prepped and on the table.

ADVERTISEMENT

It costs me money, yes, but it frees up my energy, and honestly, I think it makes me a better wife emotionally and mentally.

Her husband, however, saw the situation very differently

But my husband is furious. He says the deal was I do the housework, not pay someone to do it. He says it feels like I’m not keeping up my...

ADVERTISEMENT

and that it’s “lazy” and “disrespectful” to outsource my responsibilities, even if it’s with my own money.

The disagreement left her questioning whether she crossed a line

I tried to explain that I’m still honoring the results of the agreement the work is still done, just not by me personally and that it’s not like I’m expecting...

ADVERTISEMENT

But he’s really upset and says I’m undermining the whole point. So AITA for outsourcing the housework I “agreed” to do, even though I’m paying for it and the house...

This conflict highlights a deeper issue than cleaning schedules or meal prep. At its core, it’s about how value is assigned to labor and who gets to define what “contributing” looks like in a marriage. The wife fulfilled the functional outcome of their agreement: a clean home, prepared meals, and managed household tasks. The objection arises because she challenged the method, not the result.

From one perspective, the husband may feel the original arrangement symbolized effort and commitment, not efficiency. For some people, physically doing the work carries emotional meaning tied to traditional roles. However, meaning does not override fairness. Expecting one partner to work full-time and also personally handle all domestic labor places an unequal burden on that person’s time and energy.

ADVERTISEMENT

According to relationship researcher Dr. John Gottman, long-term relationship satisfaction depends on mutual respect and flexibility, especially when life circumstances evolve. Agreements made early in a relationship are not contracts frozen in time. Healthy partnerships allow for renegotiation when a system stops working for one partner.

Practically, this couple may benefit from reframing contributions in terms of total workload rather than symbolic roles. Financial contribution, domestic management, emotional labor, and career effort all carry weight. If outsourcing improves well-being without harming the household, it can be a legitimate solution. What matters most is whether both partners feel respected and heard. When anger enters over a practical fix, it often signals unresolved power dynamics rather than a genuine household concern.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Many commenters strongly supported the wife, questioning her husband’s motives

ADVERTISEMENT

Devils_LittleSister − You said *"he’s really upset and says I’m undermining the whole ***point****", so what is his point? To force you to do something you don't want to or...

snickersismycat − This man is crazy. How long were you dating before getting married. It sounds like he wants a submissive wife who serves him and will only be happy...

It’s not about “I take care of money and you take care of the home” because that’s exactly what’s already happening. He wants you to serve him and be the...

ADVERTISEMENT

I have a suspicion you either dated only a short time and you didn’t get to know him well enough, or he found you when you were like fresh out...

CoryW1961 − Wow. You are supposed to work at your job and handle ALL chores while Fred Flintstone relaxes after work? Who cares he makes more.

Stupid arrangement and I like how you handled it and if he wants a trad wife he needs to divorce you and marry one that doesn’t work elsewhere.

ADVERTISEMENT

He is disrespectful of your energy and feelings. There’s no excuse to objecting to hired help except he is trying to force you to quit work.

DryFig511 − Babe you are an architect. That's a super legit career. Just because your husband happens to make more money than you does not mean your job is not...

It sounds like he honestly does not respect you and sees your career as some hobby you're "allowed" to do as long as you first fulfill your wifely duties.

ADVERTISEMENT

I'd definitely be very very cautious about procreating with this man because you will be trapped at home as a full time sahm before you know it.

chiedzachashe22 − NTA, Why is he so hell bent on having you be the one doing the work? Especially the fact that you also go to work, he should be...

he should want you to be happy and stress free. I don't understand where the issue is, house is clean, clothes are clean, food is prepped life is moving

ADVERTISEMENT

Others focused on fairness and long-term consequences

dncrmom − You are both working full time. Your chores should be split 50/50. If he is paying 100% of the expenses & you only pay for cleaning & cooking...

Him expecting you to be a full time housewife while working full time reeks of control issues. I’d be very weary of getting pregnant.

ADVERTISEMENT

Sharp-Ticket1950 − NTA but why did you agree to this? ?? He earns more than you so should contribute a larger percentage of the bills, but you should both be...

lilconfusednoodle − I don't think you're an a__hole for hiring help. However, I am concerned about the "agreement" you and your husband made about the divide of chores/bills.

While I understand he makes more money and can pay the bills, that's nothing compared to taking care of an entire house AND work full time.

ADVERTISEMENT

I'd re-evaluate the divide of responsibilities with your husband because it's not fair for you to take care of this all yourself. This isn't 1950 anymore.

[Reddit User] − NTA. The reason your husband has an issue is because he wanted you to be a submissive trad wife and you found a loophole which hes perceiving...

ADVERTISEMENT

superdog0013 − He’s furious? This is not something to inspire fury. I’d be very careful how I next proceeded. And given you are an architect, you shouldn’t have any financial...

Some reactions were blunt and even humorous

angrybee93 − NTA & I can’t explain how if you ask me but this is about CONTROL! He’s mad because you HAVE MONEY TO PAY FOR YOUR CHORES DONE!

ADVERTISEMENT

Because it can’t be that the house is dirty or there’s no meals or you’re not piping him. Again I can’t explain it & I might get downvoted but I...

Vivid_Percentage5560 − What’s his deal? It sounds whack. Besides paying the bills can be done every Saturday morning. Is he furious because it wasn’t what he imagined in that he...

How fair is that? What’s his deal? I bet he’s got some coo-coo idea your doing housework yourself indicates your effort and commitment to marriage.

ADVERTISEMENT

I would explain that your hiring a housekeeper contributes positively to your overall happiness. Happy wife = happy life = more s__. What a dumbass.

Anyway, there is nothing wrong with what you chose to do, but there is something wrong with his reaction.

Dabades − Lmfao tell him to clean and cook then. Marriage is about putting in together on EVERYTHING. Not you delegate and I’m stuck doing it, bihh

ADVERTISEMENT

Katharinemaddison − NTA. You are taking care of the housework as agreed. He doesn’t have to do housework because he takes care of the bills.

That’s effectively paying someone (you) to take care of it. If he was single the choice would be do it himself or pay someone like you do.

Excellent_Property34 − I suspect he thought you'd end up sitting your job because having a full time job and doing all the household chores is just too much.

He doesn't want you to work and have your independence. He wants you chained to the kitchen sink where he knows where you are!

This situation shows how easily practical decisions can expose deeper expectations in a marriage. While the housework is clearly being handled, the disagreement reveals conflicting ideas about effort, roles, and control. Outsourcing chores solved a real problem for one partner but challenged the other’s assumptions about what marriage should look like. Whether this becomes a turning point or a warning sign depends on how willing both sides are to revisit outdated agreements and prioritize mutual respect. If you were in her place, would results matter more than tradition?

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *