AITAH For locking my pantry with key after my flatmate boyfriend ate the content, worth approximately €80?

A 20-year-old student with gluten and dairy intolerances shares a flat with her 20-year-old flatmate Sarah. The flatmate’s boyfriend Evan (24) has been staying 5 days a week since they started dating, treating the place like his primary home—without paying rent or contributing. Last week, the student did a large shop for allergy-safe snacks and ingredients (€80 total). Two days later, half was gone—eaten by Evan because “there was nothing else in the house.”

Sarah admitted it without remorse and offered only €20 reimbursement, claiming the items “weren’t that expensive.” When shown the receipt, she got defensive and said the poster was upsetting Evan. Frustrated and unable to afford more losses, the student bought a padlock for her separate pantry. Sarah called it “hostile” and “creepy” in a shared home. The student’s parents advised letting it go, but as a student on a limited budget, she can’t keep funding Evan’s eating. The online community was unanimous: NTA—protect your food and set hard boundaries.

‘AITAH For locking my pantry with key after my flatmate boyfriend ate the content, worth approximately €80?’

The living situation started amicably:

To give a little context, my flatmate Sarah (20F) and I (20F) have generally had a pleasant coexistence without any real problems, but recently she started dating a guy,

Evan (24), and since they began their relationship, he has been living in our flat five days a week and basically treats it as his primary residence. I should point...

Furthermore, I have several food intolerances (to gluten and dairy products), so my shopping bills tend to be higher than usual. Last week, I went and did a rather large...

The food disappeared quickly:

Anyway, I think about two days went by and I came home tired to make myself something to eat for dinner. When I looked in the pantry, there were no...

Half of my pantry had disappeared, which I couldn't explain at the time. So I went and asked Sarah if she knew what had happened, and she admitted without any...

The reimbursement offer was insultingly low:

She offered to reimburse me, but she was only going to give me €20, saying that they were just biscuits and pasta, so how could they be so expensive?

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At that point, I got annoyed and told him that those brands are expensive and showed him the receipt, and then he got defensive and complained that I was upsetting...

The solution was a padlock:

Yesterday, to solve the problem and avoid further inconveniences, I bought a small padlock for my pantry (I emphasise that everyone had their own separate pantry).

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When Sarah saw the padlock on the pantry, she started making a fuss, saying that I was being hostile and that it was creepy to lock up food in our...

I talked to my parents about it and they told me I should let it go, but as a student, I can't afford to spend any more money because my...

Shared flats require clear boundaries around personal property—especially food for those with medical needs (allergies/intolerances). Here, Evan’s frequent presence without rent contribution already strains fairness; eating €80 of allergy-safe food without asking or replacing it fully is theft, not “being hungry.” Sarah’s €20 offer dismisses the real cost and the poster’s dietary necessity.

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From Sarah/Evan’s view, “it’s just food” and the lock feels extreme/hostile—but ignoring repeated boundary violations (eating without permission) forces the poster to protect herself. The boyfriend’s overstay (5 days/week) likely violates lease/tenancy rules in most places; landlords often limit non-listed guests.

Experts in shared housing and conflict resolution recommend: written agreements from the start (rent, guests, food rules). Document incidents (photos, receipts, messages) for evidence. Practical steps: notify landlord about long-term guest; give written notice of increased rent or eviction if lease allows; consult local tenant laws for padlock legality (usually ok for personal storage). The poster’s action protects her health and budget—guilt-tripping her for it is manipulation. Prioritizing self-care isn’t hostile; it’s survival in a shared space.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

The community overwhelmingly supported the poster (NTA), praising the padlock as a smart, necessary boundary and calling out the flatmate and boyfriend for entitlement, theft, and freeloading.

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Many users expressed strong support for locking the pantry, viewing it as a reasonable response to repeated theft and disrespect:

Tricky-Software9440 − No and you should look into the legality of her loser boyfriend staying at your flat 5 days a week without contributing to the household.

calacmack − Great idea installing the padlock and make sure you hide the key. Your flat mate is already disrespecting you personally and financially by letting the boyfriend stay at...

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Robochickg − NTA, that is your food. I am curious if is it possible to keep some shelf stable stuff in your room instead just so they’re not aware, but...

Sashasez − NTA but your flatmate is. Disregarding your allergies and gaslighting you because they don’t want to pay for what was taken is disrespectful.

He is not your flatmate but he is there just as much. If you went to a gourmet store and paid $50 for a bag of pasta, that is what...

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You guys need a sit down. He should never ever be eating your food without replacing it. Actually he should never ever touch your food period. Do not feel bad...

Fun-Soil3210 − nta! !! Also he shouldn't be there 5 days a week if he's not paying rent! No one can live for free! What is he some kind of...

ilovemilfs1156 − NTA, her boyfriend is a b__ and he shouldn’t be your problem. definitely contact your landlord and keep the lock on. it’s ridiculous that others are trying to...

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WhatTheActualFck1 − NTA Also read the lease. That sack of s__t boyfriend is likely not allowed to stay for that long if not on the lease.

IngenuityFun8910 − NTA. Are the rent/bills in your name or hers? If they’re in her name, I’d withhold that €80 from the next payment you send her.

cannapuffer2940 − So your name is on the lease. Is her name on a sublease. Or is she just paying you rent. And you give it to the landlord. Tell...

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Do it in written form. That's the rules of the house. Because he's not respectful of your home or you. If she is on a sublease. Approved by your landlord....

Giving the reason ,that you agreed to live with her. Not her boyfriend. This is not a friend. This is the person you happen to live with. It's one thing...

There are plenty of people out there looking for a place to live. This is beyond just food. I also eat special food. It cost a hell of a lot...

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Ok-Willow-9145 − Sarah got upset because she wouldn’t be able to feed her new bf out of your pantry. If she wants him to have food she needs to pay...

Intelligent-Bend3862 − NTA. You need to put your foot down about him staying so often. Updateme

Alwayswondering8111 − NTA you need special expensive food and you're a student on a budget. Tell roommate you would have been happy to share with her, but you can't afford...

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They'll get used to the padlock. Tell them your parents gave you money for G. F. food, but only if you promised to not be irresponsible with it or something.

BreakSouthern39928 − NTA - they’re both AH for first eating your food and then not replacing it. As someone with food allergies I know how $$$ safe foods are so...

I think this is a great way to ensure this doesn’t happen again. Also I’d look into having her boyfriend removed and letting the landlord know.

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Honest_Dog4785 − No way should you let that go. He's stealing your food and then getting angry at you about your normal reaction! And his gf has been sucked in...

It's one of the biggest problems in share houses. The guy is a f__king a__hole. Especially since you can't eat gluten etc! No respect, from him or your flat mate.

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star_b_nettor − NTA And she's upset because now she, or he, has to swallow the cost of what he wants to eat. Keep the lock and talk to the rental...

Several commenters sharply criticized the flatmate and boyfriend’s entitlement and freeloading behavior:

Sashasez − NTA but your flatmate is. Disregarding your allergies and gaslighting you because they don’t want to pay for what was taken is disrespectful...

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Fun-Soil3210 − nta! !! Also he shouldn't be there 5 days a week if he's not paying rent! No one can live for free!...

ilovemilfs1156 − NTA, her boyfriend is a b__ and he shouldn’t be your problem...

WhatTheActualFck1 − NTA Also read the lease. That sack of s__t boyfriend is likely not allowed to stay for that long...

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Ok-Willow-9145 − Sarah got upset because she wouldn’t be able to feed her new bf out of your pantry...

Honest_Dog4785 − No way should you let that go. He's stealing your food and then getting angry at you about your normal reaction!...

No comments in the provided set were clearly humorous or light-hearted (the tone was serious and supportive/critical). Some offered deeper insight into shared living boundaries and allergy costs:

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Robochickg − NTA, that is your food... honestly they suck for not taking responsibility and compensating you the food’s worth...

BreakSouthern39928 − NTA - they’re both AH for first eating your food and then not replacing it. As someone with food allergies I know how $$$ safe foods are...

Shared living requires respect for personal property—especially expensive, medically necessary food. Evan’s repeated eating without permission or fair replacement is theft; Sarah’s low offer and anger at the lock show entitlement, not remorse. The padlock protects the poster’s budget and health—guilt-tripping her for it is manipulation.

Have you ever dealt with food theft or boundary violations in shared housing? Would you lock your pantry, confront the roommate, or go to the landlord? Share your stories below—flatmate drama over food and guests is common, and others’ experiences can offer practical advice.

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