AITA for not wanting to contribute to a grocery budget that I won’t eat from?

A young woman preparing to move into her first apartment found herself questioning whether she was being unreasonable or taken advantage of. What started as an exciting plan to move out with friends quickly turned tense when financial agreements began to shift just days before move-in. The disagreement centered on groceries, but underneath it were deeper issues about fairness, boundaries, and trust.

What makes the story more complicated is that the original arrangement played a major role in her agreeing to the apartment in the first place. With shared bedrooms, uneven decision-making, and limited budgets, expectations mattered. When a proposed grocery budget appeared filled with food she could not eat or afford, the conversation escalated into accusations rather than compromise. Now, with emotions running high, she is left wondering whether refusing to pay makes her unreasonable or simply realistic.

‘AITA for not wanting to contribute to a grocery budget that I won’t eat from?’

The living arrangement seemed settled until finances were revisited.

I (18F) am moving into an apartment with Missy (19F) and Taylor (17F). It’s a two bedroom, because that’s what we can afford.

Taylor was the one who picked it out and she divided our rent up and she by far was the most motivated to move out due to a family situation...

She split it evenly three ways, which I raised questions about (because Missy and me are sharing a room), but she said that she would cover groceries and so we...

A proposed grocery budget changed the original agreement.

However, now that we’re about to move in, she sent us a sample grocery list and how much she wants each of us to pay. She wants me to pay...

I don’t have $200 extra a month, and not to mention that the entire grocery list was full of things I won’t eat. It was all junk food, and it...

The disagreement escalated into accusations and hurt feelings.

I’m struggling with an ED right now, so I don’t eat very much and therefore don’t want to be contributing to the grocery budget, especially for groceries that I won’t...

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Missy doesn’t mind paying for groceries since she does a lot of cooking, but she does think the cost is a bit high. I told Taylor that I won’t be...

Missy backed me up and said that it wasn’t fair to expect me to pay when I’ll eat almost nothing on that list, and suggested that everybody just buys their...

Taylor got really mad and went on this whole tangent on how I need to be contributing to the apartment and how my ED isn’t an excuse and how I’m...

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and I’m “letting it all fall on her” and how we should be sharing groceries because it’s “too expensive for her to afford on her own” and that “groceries cost...

So AITA for not wanting to buy the groceries I won’t eat?? It just seems like she’s trying to get us to subsidize part of her groceries as out of...

In this situation, the disagreement stems from a breakdown in the original agreement. The grocery arrangement played a key role in balancing an uneven rent split, and changing that condition alters the fairness of the deal. When expectations shift late in the process, it can feel less like negotiation and more like pressure.

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From another perspective, shared grocery budgets only work when eating habits, finances, and preferences are aligned. Allergies, limited budgets, and restricted eating patterns make communal food plans difficult to manage. Expecting equal contributions without equal benefit naturally creates resentment.

On a broader level, this highlights the importance of clear boundaries in shared living situations. First apartments are often learning experiences, and unresolved power dynamics can quickly turn practical issues into emotional ones. Without written agreements and mutual respect, small financial disputes can undermine trust before roommates even move in.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many users supported the poster, arguing that the agreement was unfairly changed.

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Vdavwil − NTA. The agreement was that SHE paid for groceries, right? That was why you agreed to paying the same rent even though you have to share a room.

She's going back on her word, and if she isn't paying for groceries, your rent should go down. If there's time to get out of this, do so. Edit: A...

In the future, hammer out all the details before you're committed and write them down. Don't accept vague promises like "paying for the groceries", because they can be gamed.

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If you think the rent isn't fair, say so up front, and don't agree just to get along. Better to miss an "opportunity" than to end up in a situation...

[Reddit User] − NTA. I also don't know why you agreed to the evenly split rent. I can tell you from a mile away that Taylor is going to make...

Fragrant-Point3378 − You need to rehash all of this before you move in. You should not be paying the same rent as Taylor when you have to share your room.

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She might have a leg to stand on if you and Missy were a couple, but you’re not. Taylor should be paying 50% and you and Missy should pay 25%...

Utilities should be split in 3. If you want to split household items fine, but each of you is responsible for their own food. Any other arrangement is Taylor using...

AnythingLoud7913 − No. Taylor agreed to cover the groceries. She’s the a__hole.

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arlae − 2vs1 rent needs to be discussed again you're subsidizing her life if you let her get away with this it'll only get worse. Can you and missy move...

Others offered practical advice and a more balanced take.

gold_fish14 − NTA I’ve never heard of people who are just roommates having a grocery budget. Buy your own food with your money.

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For things like paper towels and toilet paper or things that are more communal, I’d get splitting the cost but $200 a month for communal food is crazy.

K_A_irony − NTA. Also you need to hammer out NOW a room mate agreement that spells all of this out. Include how many nights a week each of you can...

what the rules are for keeping common areas clean such as all dishes must be washed before you go to bed, etc. You can use chat gpt to suggest additional...

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She sounds flaky and immature (duh she is 17) and she will be a nightmare. Please get your ED treated. It really can mess up your life in terrifying ways....

[Reddit User] − So you’re all expected to pay $200 a month on groceries? $600 a month on groceries is absurd for your age. I’d go back to the list...

Considering Taylor apparently divided the rent alone and is so a__l about this, you could be getting screwed over here.

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A few users kept it blunt or light to cut through the tension.

vapthywave − NTA. Them adding items THEY want to a grocery list YOU would be paying for is controlling af. Plus having 0 empathy about your ED is AH behavior,...

I’ve lived with a few different roommates and overall everyone just bought food for themselves. That’s pretty standard.

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SimbaRph − Don't move in.

This situation highlights how quickly shared living plans can unravel when expectations are unclear or change at the last minute. What was framed as teamwork began to feel like pressure, especially when finances, health, and fairness collided.

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Should shared grocery budgets ever be mandatory among roommates? How should rent be divided when bedrooms are shared unevenly? And when is it better to walk away from a living arrangement before it officially begins?

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