AITA for saying I don’t need to be thrifty?

A soon-to-be-married woman found herself in the middle of a heated family conflict when her fiancé’s mother stayed with them over Thanksgiving and began criticizing her spending habits on everyday household items. What started as minor comments about hand soap, kitchen towels, and trash bags quickly escalated into accusations of being wasteful with “her son’s money”—even though the fiancée currently earns a six-figure salary while her fiancé finishes his internship.

The visit turned sour with yelling, tears, a canceled holiday gathering, and now serious questions about whether the engagement can survive unchecked family interference and a partner who failed to defend his future wife.

‘AITA for saying I don’t need to be thrifty?’

The conflict erupted right in their own home over basic items.

I'm engaged to Matt. Matt was raised by a single mom Tina. It was the first time Tina came to stay with us over Thanksgiving. I get that there is...

My mom is an engineer and my dad is a lawyer. Tina stayed on our couch and immediately tried to make me into this thrifty housewife for her son although...

It became hostile about things like our hand soap in the bathroom. Kitchen towels and trash bags. We got into a major fight over them. I normally just use the...

After the shopping disagreement, things boiled over into a major confrontation.

I never really paid attention to the price but after we got back from grocery shopping and I didn't get stove top stuffing or mashed potatoes she was mad at...

We went to our loft and she started yelling at me about how I didn't need to shop the way I do and that I needed to wise up money...

he should match or exceed my pay in two years so the price of milk and trash bags is not something I think of. I told her that. I don't...

I got angry at her and left her in the loft and texted Matt about her. I went to stay with my sister and her girlfriend who lives on the...

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The fallout rippled through the holiday and beyond.

They were planning to come to our mini Thanksgiving (this is Wednesday night) Matt asked if we could now skip hosting because his mom is not in a good place...

They ended up eating the turkey I was going to prepare and then made Matt rush to get stovetop stuffing and instant potatoes. He dropped overnight bag off at my...

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Normally Matt and my sister have a good relationship but she yelled at him. His mom left but Matt thinks we should discuss finances. My whole family heard about what...

My family is angry at him and his mom. My mom thinks I should cancel the engagement but Matt and his mom think I’m awful for just leaving his mom...

At its core, the issue revolves around one partner’s mother overstepping into the couple’s private household decisions. The mother-in-law projected her own past financial struggles onto the younger couple, assuming frugality was universally required and viewing any deviation as wasteful—even when the household’s actual earner was comfortably covering expenses. Her repeated framing of spending as “wasting her son’s money” reveals a deeper belief that finances belong primarily to the man, regardless of reality. This mindset not only disrespects the fiancée’s contributions but also undermines the couple’s autonomy as independent adults.

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Opposing perspectives exist, however. Some might argue the fiancée could have shown more patience or empathy toward a guest from a different background, perhaps by gently explaining their choices instead of directly stating she didn’t need to be thrifty. Others point out that the mother-in-law’s emotional reaction—crying and feeling attacked—deserved de-escalation rather than abandonment in an unfamiliar home. Still, the prevailing view among observers is that the guest initiated hostility in someone else’s space, shifting the burden of peacekeeping unfairly onto the hostess.

Broader social dynamics emerge here: differing class backgrounds can create friction when unaddressed, and enmeshed family ties often complicate new partnerships. The fiancé’s choice to prioritize his mother’s feelings over defending his fiancée in their shared home raises red flags about future boundary-setting. Without clear communication and alignment on finances, in-law influence, and mutual support, small disagreements risk snowballing into lasting resentment.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Many users rallied behind the poster, calling out the unfair treatment she received in her own home and urging her fiancé to set firmer boundaries with his mother.

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lawfox32 − NTA. Matt needs to have a talk with his mom and explain that *you* are currently the breadwinner, and that you and he make financial decisions about how...

and if she has issues she should speak to him about them. If he won't. ..you have a fiance problem, not a MiL problem.

She berated and belittled you in your own home because she *didn't like the grocery store you went to* to shop for the Thanksgiving *you and Matt* were hosting, at...

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and then got upset that you didn't console her *after she picked a fight and berated you*. Your fiance took her side, cancelled Thanksgiving for your family,

and ate the food you bought and were going to prepare with his mom. Because you "upset her"-- nevermind that she started it and she upset you! In your house!

If she wanted specifically Stovetop stuffing and mashed potatoes, she could have gone to a different store to buy them, asked you if the two of you could go to...

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or texted Matt to ask him to pick them up. She instead started criticizing and berating you because she wanted to go to a different grocery store than the one...

and in the process indicated that she doesn't respect you, doesn't understand or doesn't believe that you are the primary breadwinner right now or that you could ever earn your...

and that she will always see you as inadequate and a drain on "her son's money" and she'll cover for that by calling you a s__b and saying *you* upset...

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Listen_2learn − Matt’s mother went from giving unsolicited and unwanted opinions to then escalate to full blown completely inappropriate behavior.

Whatever she’s dealing with, has nothing to do with your choice of trash bags and mashed potatoes.

What’s disconcerting is that she think’s you’re living off her son and that she’s within her rights to treat you with contemptuous disrespect - and Matt did nothing to stop...

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She has shown you who she is and Matt’s reaction to this situation is problematic. Your parents are right. YWNBTA

Reasonable-Sale8611 − I think it is important that she complained about how you "waste" her son's money. This implies either that Matt has given her the wrong impression about your...

or that she has a funny attitude that the money always belongs to the man. Or both. Whatever the explanation, she overstepped her bounds by trying to control and criticize...

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Your spending, or Matt's, is not hers to control. I don't think you should fix this by disclosing that your salary is higher than Matt's because it's private information.

(Sometimes if you give people private iformation, they'll misuse it in the future. ) I think it's problematic that, for Thanksgiving, you had to leave your own home and go...

I think it's problematic that his mother was calling you "horrible" over an argument stemming from what you spent on trash bags and mashed potatoes.

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I think it's problematic that you didn't get to eat the turkey you bought. And now Matt thinks you should discuss finances. I mean, ok, you probably SHOULD. Couples should...

But this seems instigated by his mother's strange reasoning over miniscule grocery issues and suggests that Matt may be unable to draw a line and keep his mother out of...

[Reddit User] − What she said is the key here. ‘Spending HER son’s money’ equates to ‘HER’ money. She has eyes of the prize which is her son funding her...

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I’d have a proper sit down with him and find out exactly what he wants for the future. And I bet he wants part of that to be his mother...

theassholethrowawa − Info: Have you and Matt sat down and talked without either of your family members being involved?

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A smaller group of commenters took a more measured approach, recognizing potential nuance while still expressing concern about the fiancé’s handling of the situation.

mfruitfly − So I'm not sure if you should cancel the engagement, but you have a lot to work through and consider. First, NTA for saying you don't need to...

Unless you flaunt your wealth (look at these expensive sunglasses I just bought), put down others for their lack of wealth (you could never afford these),

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or are tone deaf to how much others have to spend (Oh I thought we'd eat at this 5 star restaurant, we can split the bill right) then you aren't...

You took his mother to a grocery store where you were paying, it was in your price range, and it is a grocery store, not Louis Vuitton.

Second, Matt allowed you to be run out of your own home and to spend the holiday away, while he stayed with his mother. That would almost be a dealbreaker...

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You didn't need to stay with her after she yelled at you, it doesn't matter that she ended up in tears- she did that to herself by being upset that...

Third, you need to really think about what a future with Matt looks like. This will always be his mother, and this is how she acts, and he will also...

So finally, sit down with Matt and talk about it. He wants to discuss finances, I'd love to hear what he has to say about that, especially when you are...

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And you don't have to live within the budget his mother wants for you, you have to live within the budget you can afford and the two of you agree...

He ruined a holiday and stayed with his mother in your home while you had to stay elsewhere, he called you a "snobby diva" and didn't even attempt to defend...

when you are the one spending money on this holiday, you are the one doing the work for this holiday, you are the one taking his mother around to get...

and he made YOUR thanksgiving meal with her and now calls you names and wants to talk money with you? No way I'd put up with that b__lshit.

tan_sandoval − NTA This is my first holiday season as a married lady, and my mom suddenly became a real arse as well. The root of it was that things...

So every. little. thing. that wasn't exactly her way was suddenly a major issue. And I had to sit her down and tell her, essentially, tough titties.

Things ARE different now and they're never going back, so you need to put on your big girl panties and deal. I am balancing two families now, so if you...

I probably cannot accommodate that and may be booked. I cannot attend a family holiday event every weekend in December because we need to do things with his family too.

I am buying a different stuffing now because his side of the family needs gluten free, the Trader Joe's gluten free cornbread stuffing is bomb,

and I'm not making two dishes when honestly you would like this if you tried it and it holds up better, IMO, for leftovers. You can buy and make stovetop...

But that's the thing: MY mom, so I sat her down and set boundaries. The most concerning part about this to me is that your fiance didn't do the same.

Her behavior is...well, sadly not terribly uncommon for someone who is dealing with her baby growing up and her holiday traditions changing. But coddling her isn't the right call, and...

My husband would have backed me 100%, told his mom to shape up or ship out because I would not be leaving my own home over the holidays,

and called her out on her behavior. Your family loves you and is concerned you might be marrying someone who doesn't have your back and puts mommy first. They're right.

Your fiance needs to get his rear in gear and cut that umbilical cord. If he's not ready to choose his spouse over mommy, then he's not ready to be...

VeronicaSawyer8 − Sounds like Matt gave his mom a *very incorrect* version of your financial situation together. Because of ego? Because he knew his mom wouldn't approve? Who knows NTA...

A couple of responses added a touch of humor to cut through the tension, poking fun at the absurdity of the fight without being overly harsh.

Dapper-Cantaloupe866 − NTA. The mom sounds a bit unhinged & Matt sounds like a mamma's boy. I'd definitely reconsider the engagement. Do you really want this woman being a constant...

sammotico − INFO: i'm sorry. .. did they seriously eat the thanksgiving dinner *you* paid for? ?

This situation shows how quickly minor differences in money habits and family expectations can spiral into major relationship stress, especially when boundaries aren’t clearly enforced. The poster defended her right to manage her household without constant judgment, yet the fallout left hurt feelings on all sides and raised serious questions about her fiancé’s priorities.

What do you think—should couples always disclose exact salaries early on to avoid these misunderstandings, or is financial privacy worth protecting even from in-laws? Have you ever dealt with a partner’s family criticizing your spending during a visit, and how did you handle it?

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