AITA for tweezing off my baby’s unibrow?

A 15-month-old baby girl was born with a full head of hair and thick lashes, but also developed a prominent unibrow that darkened over the past few months. Her mom, influenced by her own childhood food insecurity and perhaps a desire to spare her daughter future teasing, decided to pluck the connecting hairs while the toddler slept. She worked carefully over a couple of days, stopping whenever the baby stirred, and felt it was a minor aesthetic fix with no real harm.

A visiting mom friend noticed the change during a playdate and reacted with visible horror upon learning it was done intentionally. The mom felt judged and insecure, even though her husband dismissed it as overthinking. Now she’s wondering if a simple grooming choice crossed into unnecessary vanity or potential harm. Was it harmless parental decision-making, or projecting adult beauty standards onto a baby?

‘AITA for tweezing off my baby’s unibrow?’

The baby’s natural features were mostly celebrated, but one stood out:

I gave birth 15 months ago to a beautiful baby girl. She’s always been hairy. It’s nice in a way because she was born with hair on her head and...

But she also developed a unibrow. It was light at first. But over the last 4-5 months, it’s gotten fairly prominent.

For aesthetic reasons, I decided to pluck it while she slept. If she woke up I would stop. I managed to get it all off in a couple days. I...

The confrontation came unexpectedly:

But a fellow mom friend of mine (meaning a friend IRL) stopped by for a “play date” a few days ago. She’s an extremely observant person and she mentioned my...

I was honest and said I plucked the middle while she slept. She had this horrified look and said she was surprised that I did that. I didn’t really know...

Husband’s take and lingering doubt:

I’ve talked to my husband and he says I’m overthinking this, but I don’t know.. Honest feedback welcome, obviously.

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Edit for emphasis: As I said in my post, my daughter is 15 months. Over a year. The hair darkened in the past few months but that is not her...

Tweezing a 15-month-old’s unibrow is a cosmetic act performed without the child’s awareness or consent, raising ethical concerns about applying adult beauty standards to infants. At this developmental stage, toddlers experience the world through sensory input and attachment, not self-image. Plucking causes brief but genuine pain—follicles are sensitive, and the skin may redden or become irritated. Pediatric dermatologists generally advise against non-medical hair removal in babies and toddlers, as the minor risks (discomfort, potential ingrown hairs, follicle trauma) provide no offsetting health benefit.

The stated motivation—“aesthetic reasons”—reflects parental projection rather than the child’s needs. Babies feel no shame about a unibrow; they are not teased or self-conscious. Introducing grooming for appearance early can unintentionally signal that natural features require “fixing” to be acceptable, planting seeds for future body dissatisfaction. Developmental psychology research links frequent parental appearance interventions to increased appearance anxiety and lower self-esteem in later childhood and adolescence, particularly for girls.

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Culturally, some families view brow shaping as routine care, similar to trimming nails. If done gently with no distress, physical harm is minimal. The deeper issue is the message: that her natural look is somehow deficient now, rather than allowing her to reach self-awareness on her own terms.

The friend’s shock and the mother’s insecurity reveal inner conflict. Consulting a pediatrician can provide reassurance and rule out any medical factors. Ultimately, babies thrive on unconditional love and acceptance—small grooming decisions accumulate into lasting lessons about self-worth. Prioritizing her comfort and natural state over aesthetics offers the strongest foundation for confidence.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

The Reddit community was sharply divided, with the majority condemning the act as unnecessary vanity projected onto a baby, while a smaller group defended it as minor grooming to prevent future teasing. The tone ranged from outraged to pragmatic.

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Most commenters labeled it YTA, focusing on pain, body image messaging, and unnecessary intervention:

[Reddit User] − YTA. Wtf is wrong with someone who cares about their baby's EYEBROWS? ! Way to cement those self esteem issues nice and early, 10/10 parenting

Doogoon − YTA. You're seriously applying adult beauty standards to a child- a baby in fact. The kids unibrows make ZERO difference to her experience as a baby,

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but her mom pulling out her hairs one by one because she isnt pretty enough is going to carry a lifetime of complications.

frumpyfrog − YTA. You said it, "aesthetic reasons". It took you two days of her waking up while you caused her pain for no reason except your own vanity. Narcissistic...

veegeese − YTA. Just some food for thought, I have super low self esteem due to my mom constantly tweezing, bleaching (hair & teeth), picking, prodding,

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and fussing over my appearance my entire childhood. You’ll be teaching your kid to hate her natural existence and she will feel the effects for the rest of her life.

oldhead − YTA that was pain for no other reason than YOUR vanity.

Mayapples − YTA -- Let your baby be a baby. There will be plenty of time for her to decide what beauty standards she wants to uphold and which ones...

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There's no need to project it onto her. I don't know, man . .. when my daughter was a baby I'd look at her and her beautiful little baby unibrow...

"I'm going to want to rip a new one into the first person to make her feel ashamed of that. " I can't imagine setting myself up to be that...

AtomikRadio − YTA, undoubtedly it was uncomfortable/painful for her (it is for me! ) and you're doing it why? Your own vanity. She sure doesn't care, only you do.

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taintwest − Yta. Don’t do this. It’s some Farrah Abraham nonsense.

A smaller but vocal group argued NTA, viewing it as harmless preventive grooming similar to other common baby beauty practices:

rosietherazz − NTA. I'm sure I'll get downvoted for this opinion, but it's your baby. If she's not waking up, she's obviously okay. I have no kids so maybe I'm...

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If you do it now, you're building a pain tolerance for later. Also, I'm sorry, but everyone in this world is judgemental as f__k and will be thinking rude thoughts...

You're doing your baby a favor that is relatively painless. I've plucked lots of hair off my body, the only place the "hurts" is the upper lip. As long as...

I also think that shaving it is a poor plan, in case you're thinking of that. Plucking is much more precise whereas shaving you run the risk of nicking her,...

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My sister has had diagnosed PCOS for a long time now. We both have incredibly hairy arms (I've shaved mine every day for about 8 years now)

but her hair also extends to her face. She's a strong woman but I've seen her sob over this. Don't let your child feel less than because of some hair,...

whatdowetrynow − NTA You're getting so much hate but I really think this is pretty minor, as long as you're stopping at the slightest sign she's waking up or it...

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People (myself included) treat their babies for things like cradle cap or infant acne all the time, which, if your baby dislikes baths, is probably considerably more unpleasant to them...

Ask your pediatrician and if they're not bothered by it, I say go ahead guilt free. Revisit when the kiddo is old enough to Express their own opinion.

guambatwombat − I'm gonna say NTA. Plucking doesn't really hurt. If you were full on sculpting the brows, I'd say you were the a__hole, but cleaning up a unibrow? Who...

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People pierce babies ears and style their hair in ways that's painful because they think it's cute. You did something that I am 100% sure that will be a part...

Mrmrrrr − NTA This is so funny. I had the worst eyebrows and was never taught to take care of them, even after I taking a razor to them out...

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Kai-07 − Did your child wake up crying, or was she more "wtf is pulling at my face" and confused? Either way, I'd think NTA, but especially so if she's...

Not much different than fighting your child to try to put her hair in pigtails when she doesn't want them. The brushing can hurt, and the pulling into a pigtail...

At least you don't force her through it when she's awake. Also others have said children with monobrows are relentlessly teased, so I see it as helping her. For those...

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I'm not talking about where the kid can't eat or speak due to their jacked up teeth, I'm talking about "your teeth look funny, here, let's put you through years...

and inability to eat sticky candy for the sake of perfectly straight teeth when you're older." Not to mention facial deformities that have no negative health affects but are put...

On the other hand, I've read in here that the baby's skin and hair follicles could be damaged by this. I would do research or ask a pediatrician if it's...

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If so, either stop the plucking until she's older or find cremes to soothe her skin. The extra hair could very well fall out as she gets older though. I...

You guys who are exploding here saying "what kind of awful mother are you, you fuckin cretin, how dare you, rah rah rah" need to calm the hell down. There...

This debate exposes how quickly parental grooming choices can become lightning rods for judgment. Tweezing a toddler’s unibrow may seem trivial to some—a quick fix to avoid future teasing—but to others it’s an early lesson in body shame, driven by adult vanity rather than the child’s needs. The baby feels no self-consciousness now; the pain, however brief, is real.

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What do you think? Is minor cosmetic grooming harmless, or does it set a dangerous precedent? Would you pluck a baby’s unibrow, pierce ears, or leave everything natural? Share your take below!

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