AITA for leaving her because she was expecting that I would help her like professional moving company?

A 22-year-old college student with a truck walked away from helping a female classmate move after she expected him to handle everything like a paid professional service—packing her belongings, buying boxes, and covering costs—while offering nothing in return. What started as a typical favor for a fellow student quickly turned into frustration when he arrived to find her apartment in chaos, nothing boxed, and her attitude that he should just take care of it all.

He tried to help anyway, moving what furniture he could, but when she demanded he buy packing supplies and refused to pay, he reached his limit and left without a word. Days later, her belongings were discarded by the apartment manager, she lost her security deposit (around $1000), and now her friends are messaging him, calling him an asshole for “causing” her loss. He’s wondering if he overreacted or if her entitlement justified his exit.

‘AITA for leaving her because she was expecting that I would help her like professional moving company?’

As a college student who owns a truck, he’s used to helping friends move in exchange for gas or food:

I (22 M) have a truck. Having a truck as a college student means that you will help a lot of colleagues move stuff if they do not own a...

I have helped around 5 colleagues so far, and usually, it takes 3 hours or so, and they would pay for the gas or food or both for using my...

One female classmate (21F) asked for his help moving:

One of the colleague (21 f) asked me if I can help her move her stuff. I said I would, assuming that she would be like the rest of her...

I was surprised and asked her why none of her stuff is prepared to move. She said she was waiting for me. I was extremely annoyed, but still tried to...

When he returned, she expected him to buy boxes:

When I came back, she told me to buy the boxes for her. I asked her for her card or money to buy boxing stuff, but she just said, "you...

Also, I told her all the stuff she should have boxed. She keeps complaining that I am not being a good friend. After that, I was done with her at...

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Later, he learned the consequences:

A few days later, I found out, she basically had all of her stuff removed and thrown out by the residential manager, and lost a lot of her stuff and...

A lot of her friends DM me that I am an asshole, and saying it is my fault that she lost 1000 dollars. AITA for leaving her because she was...

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This situation highlights a common boundary issue in friendships: the difference between a casual favor and expecting free labor like a hired service. The OP offered transportation help with his truck, a standard college courtesy often repaid with gas, food, or appreciation. The woman, however, crossed into entitlement by not preparing anything, refusing to contribute financially, and guilting him into covering costs and packing—tasks that go far beyond “helping move.”

Some might argue he should have stayed to avoid her losing everything, or communicated his departure more clearly. Yet this overlooks her responsibility: adults must manage their own moves, including packing and supplies. Her failure to prepare or pay led directly to the outcome, not his refusal to become her unpaid moving company. Leaving abruptly wasn’t the most mature approach, but it was a valid reaction to being taken advantage of.

Relationship and boundary expert Nedra Glover Tawwab (author of “Set Boundaries, Find Peace”) emphasizes that saying no to unreasonable demands protects your time and energy: “Helping should feel mutual, not exploitative.” Here, the imbalance was clear—she expected full service without reciprocity. The OP’s exit, while abrupt, prevented further exploitation.

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Moving forward, he could respond to the accusing friends with a simple explanation: “I offered truck help like I do for others; she expected me to pack, buy supplies, and pay—where were you all when she needed help?” He owes no apology for protecting himself. In future, clarifying expectations upfront (“I’ll bring the truck if you handle packing and gas”) avoids similar drama. This experience reinforces the importance of mutual respect in friendships—true friends don’t demand one-sided favors.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

The Reddit community overwhelmingly sided with the OP, calling the woman entitled and blaming her fully for the loss:

Most defended his decision to leave and criticized her expectations:

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backyardchick − NTA. She was trying to use you and you put a stop to it. Why didn't any of her other so-called friends help her instead of blaming you...

warclonex − this whole situation just sounds too bizzare to be true in the sense how someone could expect a colleague to pay for their move?

NTA in leaving as thats just rediculous however it was a d__k move to leave without saying anything i wonder where all these friends doing the DMs where on the...

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LadyPurpleButterfly − She does realize PROFESSIONAL get paid right? NTA. Professionals don't do that s__t for free. She was 10000% percent trying to abuse your generosity!

[Reddit User] − OMG this reminds me of some friends I had. They asked my wife and I for help moving across town, which I assumed would be moving boxes...

These guys hadn’t even packed their stuff and we’re still arguing over what they were going to keep or throw away. We helped them solve that dilemma, box their s__t...

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My wife and I were later moving across the state, and they offered to help move us out, which I was cool with, just moving boxes to the truck. Motherfuckers...

Haleston − Generally, you are NTA. Your reasons are valid. It sounds like she was o__rwhelmed by the move and used to people handling her s__t and cleaning up her...

Let's hope she will learn a lesson from this and prepare better next time. It just would have been a lot more mature on your part to announce that you...

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Justrennt − NTA. She was a big AH and the fact that her stuff was thrown out was her and only HER fault alone! I would have left earlier than...

Did she said for once "Thank you for helping? " I dont think so. But I am sure that she told your friends a different story, so maybe its time...

T400 − 100% NTA - Truck owner here. The unwritten rule always is "I am here to help you move, I am not here to help you pack" Everyone knows...

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Anyone who needs help packing has to ask for that up-front. The other rule of moving is that the person who is moving is expected to put in the highest...

[Reddit User] − NTA A lot of her friends DM me that I am an a__hole, and saying it is my fault that she lost 1000 dollars. Just respond, "where...

Quick-Possession-245 − Nope - the deal is that if you ask friends to help move, you get your stuff packed up in time for them to load it and take...

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Plus_Data_1099 − She had a nerve if she wanted a professional she should have paid for one

Emeraldus999 − NTA. And now you know why one of her friends went camping instead.

Beneficial_Bat_5656 − NTA. Block all those entitled ones messaging you.

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MountainMidnight9400 − Definitely NTA. Insane that she thought you would pay for her moving expenses.

Proper_Sense_1488 − that is not how this works. NTA tell those friends its not your fault she is incompetent

[Reddit User] − Poor entitled princess is the AH, not you

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This story reveals a frustrating pattern in some friendships: one person gives generously, while another takes without gratitude or effort. The OP drew a reasonable line against being used, even if the exit wasn’t perfectly handled. Ultimately, her losses stem from her own choices—not his refusal to become her free moving service.

What’s your take? Have you ever been roped into a “favor” that turned into full-on labor? Would you have stayed to help, or walked away like he did? Share your thoughts below!

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