AITA for repurposing my mother inlaw’s gift after she gave my daughter a gift card to pierce her ears?

A mom is wondering if she crossed a line after repurposing her mother-in-law’s generous birthday gift for her 10-year-old daughter. The gift? A $150 voucher specifically for ear piercings, plus gold earrings, because the family tradition on her husband’s side is to pierce girls’ ears young—often as babies—and many cousins already have multiple piercings.

The MIL made it clear this was to help the girl “catch up” with her cousins. But the mom, who has always preferred to wait until her daughter is older, felt the gift was overstepping. She told her daughter to hold off on piercings, stored the earrings, and used the gift card to buy necklaces, bangles, and gifts for friends instead. When the MIL found out, she was furious—accusing the mom of being ungrateful and abusing her thoughtful gift.

‘AITA for repurposing my mother inlaw’s gift after she gave my daughter a gift card to pierce her ears?’

The mom explains that ear piercings are a big tradition in her husband’s family, but she’s always wanted to wait:

Our daughter who just turned 10 does not yet have her ears pierced. This is extremely unusual in my husbands side of the family as all the girls tend to...

My MIL and all my sisters in law have their have their ears pierced numerous times and it seems to be a tradition. All my nieces have at least 2...

My MIL has been asking when I will get my daughter's ears pierced ever since she was born. I told her I prefer to wait.

She did back off for a while but the topic came up again recently as my daughter has started asking when she can get her ears pierced. I was considering...

Her daughter recently started asking about it herself, so the mom was considering allowing it as a teen gift. Then came the birthday dinner:

Word got out that my daughter wanted her ears pierced and my MIL jumped right on this. We had a birthday dinner for my daughter a couple weeks ago and...

I have to say she was generous because there was a 2 pairs of gold earrings and a gift card for some accessories place that does ear piercing for $150....

My MIL then told her she can use this to catch up to her cousins and made a comment about how one of her aunties had like 5 piercings in...

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The mom felt this crossed a boundary:

I was very annoyed because it appeared my MIL made the decision that my daughter could get her ears pierced. I told my MIL that $150 is a lot to...

but she would really prefer if she gets a few ear piercings so has something fun to appreciate with her cousins. This even frustrated me more because I felt my...

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Frustrated, the mom decided to wait:

I later told my daughter I would rather her wait for her to get her ears pierced. She was disappointed but I said we will store way the earrings for...

and we could use the voucher to buy some necklaces and bangles as well as some gifts to give to friends when we attend other parties.

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When the MIL visited and asked about the piercings:

Well my MIL visited us yesterday. She asked daughter if she had used her gift to get her ears pierced yet and my daughter show she hadn't and told how...

I could here my daughter tell my MIL from the next room that she would like to get a few ear piercings but I wouldn't allow.

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My MIL got upset at how I abused her generous gift and started having a go at me about being overly uptight about just a few earrings. She also told...

She also said that if we weren't going to use it for the intended purpose I should have just returned it so she could use for my nieces. She ended...

Additional info: My husband is on my MIL's side and telling me I should just accept his families tradition. I was 50/50 on the ear piercing thing but the gift...

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This conflict goes beyond ear piercings—it’s about boundaries, control, and whose voice matters most: the child’s, the parents’, or the extended family’s. The MIL overstepped by giving a gift with a clear agenda and pressuring the child directly, which can feel like undermining parental authority. On the other hand, the mom’s decision to repurpose the gift card entirely for other items (including gifts for friends) can come across as disregarding both the giver’s intent and the daughter’s expressed wishes.

From a parenting perspective, at age 10, children are beginning to develop autonomy and should have a say in low-risk body modifications like earlobe piercings, especially when done safely at a professional studio. Child psychologist Dr. Laura Markham emphasizes: “When children express a clear desire for something harmless to their body autonomy, parents should listen and guide rather than override—particularly when the alternative is forcing them to use a personal gift in ways they don’t want.” (Source: Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids).

Practical advice: Have an open conversation with your daughter about what she truly wants (one piercing? Multiple? None?). If she’s ready, book a professional piercing together as a positive experience. Apologize to the MIL for not communicating boundaries clearly beforehand, and explain that future gifts should not come with strings attached. Involve your husband in setting family expectations—traditions are fine, but they shouldn’t override a child’s comfort or parents’ decisions.

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Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

The community is divided, with most leaning toward YTA or ESH, but the biggest criticism focuses on repurposing the gift and sidelining the daughter’s wishes.

Many called the mom YTA for ignoring her daughter’s wishes and misusing a gift meant for her:

dominiqlane − Slight YTA. Your daughter is 10 and has expressed an interest in getting her ears pierced and you seemed to be open to the idea until you saw...

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It seems like you’re stubbornly against it just because your in laws are for it. Have you taken into consideration your daughter’s feelings in all of this?

She wants to do it and she probably feels like you’re not listening to what she wants because you’re so against MIL’s opinion.

Take a step back and ask yourself why you’re taking this stance. Is it pride? Stubbornness? Would you prefer your daughter “rebel” and go do it without you?

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Ok-Abroad5887 − YTA. ..mostly for using your daughter's gift to pay for OTHER people's gift. I doubt MIL would have been as upset if her gift went TO your daughter...

She could've have pick out earrings to save for when you allow it. Or used through the year to pick up pretty things and remember that gramma was thinking about...

alyssalouk − I'd say you're kinda the a__hole. You're in complete control of piercings and tattoos and stuff until (16?) A certain age, but if it was a gift for...

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She doesn't have to spend it on bangles or gifts for her friends. It's not abuse, but misuse of gift money. It was for her, not you, not the friends....

MummyAnsem − YTA Your daughter wants to get her ears piecred. It is harmless. Take her to a professional piercer, a place that doesnt use a piercing gun,

and just let your kid be happy in her body. This is very clearly more about you than it is your daughter. Edit: it was exceptionally tacky and bad parent...

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jazzy07dime − I’m gonna say YTA, I think your daughter is old enough to make the decision if she wants her ear pierced and she expressed she does.

Not only did you ignore her desire to get her ears pierced but you repurpose her birthday gift card intended for piercings and jewelry for something else. Totally downplaying your...

Captain_Quoll − I think YTA for making her spend her gift money on presents for other people.

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Several said ESH, criticizing both the MIL’s overstepping and the mom’s stubbornness:

[Reddit User] − ESH. Your MIL is overstepping and if I understand things right, she wants your daughter to get several ear piercings without even asking her if that what...

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But you do suck just as much for refusing for your daughter to get her ears pierced at least once as it is what she wants. Neither of you is...

[Reddit User] − ESH Once a gift is given, the giver doesn’t get to dictate how the gift gets spent. The gift recipient gets to decide how they want to...

MIL = AH YTA for telling your daughter that she has to spend her gift buying presents for others. Again, it’s her gift so it should be her choice alone....

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Your daughter said she’s ready to get her ears pierced, so start at one and let things progress from there at a pace YOUR DAUGHTER ALONE is comfortable with.

shadow-foxe − ESH - so you admit you said no merely to annoy your MIL. So you did not consider your daughters feelings on this.

MIL did over step but i get the feeling your hubby knew and had been asked. So you made your daughter buy items with the gift card so she can...

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Essshayne − Esh. Gift card was for your daughter and her alone, so doing anything other than take her over to the shop and let her do what she likes...

A few defended the mom or focused on boundaries and safety:

Johoski − NTA And the last place to get her ears pierced is at a mall accessories store. When you do it, take her to a professional piercing studio and...

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My ears were pierced by a department store jewelry clerk with a punch piercer. One hole is crooked, so post earrings don't sit straight on that side.

geedy_9396 − Honestly, I cannot see where the problem is. I mean your daughter is old enough to know what she wants, and even if she decided in a month...

she can stop wearing them and her ears will heal within a short amount of time (been there, done that). For me it sounds like that you are having a...

But don't forget your daughter is old enough to decide certain things alone (in a proper range) and that she wants to start to experiment what she likes and what...

Whisperlee − ESH except your daughter. Those ears belong to your daughter. It's HER choice to get them pierced or not pierced.

I abhor parents who pierce their infants' ears 'cause that's not their choice to make. But your daughter is 10yo, which is old enough for HER to decide if she...

lonelypizzalover − YTA. if your daughter wants her ears pierced she should get them. It’s her body, not yours.

ShadowySylvanas − Info: if your daughter wants it, why isn't she allowed to pierce her ears? It's not a dangerous procedure.

I get not getting multiple piercings, it would be a good idea to first do the 'traditional' earlobe piercings so she can see if she likes it, but why forbid...

This story highlights the tricky balance between family traditions, parental boundaries, and a child’s growing autonomy. The MIL clearly overstepped with a gift that had strings attached, but the mom’s response—repurposing the card and dismissing her daughter’s wishes—ended up fueling the drama and making her feel unheard.

What do you think? Should the mom have let her daughter use the gift card for at least one piercing? Or was repurposing it the right call to avoid pressure? Have you dealt with pushy in-laws and family traditions? Share your thoughts in the comments!

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