AITA for asking my sister to not take her baby to a nice restaurant?
A woman planned a nice dinner out with her visiting sister and brother-in-law at one of the best restaurants in town — her sister’s idea. When she asked if they had a sitter for the 1-year-old or needed help finding one, her sister responded proudly: “This baby has already been to more Michelin-star restaurants than most people will in their entire life.”
The woman worried that a toddler could cry, make noise, or create smells that might disturb other diners on a special evening. The restaurant doesn’t have high chairs and isn’t family-oriented. She asked her sister to leave the baby with a trusted sitter (a practicing pediatrician her sister knows), but now feels she might be seen as rude or judgmental. Is she the jerk for making the request?

‘AITA for asking my sister to not take her baby to a nice restaurant?’
The invitation came from the sister herself:


The OP explained her genuine concern for other diners:


Later edits clarified important details about the venue and sitter options:






This is a textbook etiquette vs. modern parenting disagreement. High-end restaurants (especially those without high chairs) are designed as adult-oriented spaces where patrons pay a premium for a calm, sophisticated atmosphere. A 1-year-old’s natural unpredictability — crying, babbling, diaper changes, sudden fussiness — can easily disrupt that experience for others, even with attentive parents.
The sister’s reply (“This baby has already been to more Michelin-star restaurants…”) sounds boastful and dismissive of other diners’ expectations. While some parents successfully bring calm infants to fine dining, it is not an automatic right. The absence of high chairs is a clear signal that babies are not the intended clientele.
Etiquette consultant Myka Meier (Beaumont Etiquette) advises that when choosing a venue, guests should consider the style of the establishment and the comfort of fellow diners. If a child cannot reasonably be expected to remain quiet, a family-friendly alternative is the considerate choice. Offering a known, trusted sitter (a pediatrician her sister has met) was a generous and practical solution — not controlling.
The sister is not wrong to want to include her child, but assuming the restaurant and other guests must simply accommodate that choice is entitled. The OP is not the jerk for setting a boundary around the experience she was planning to provide. NAH in intent, but the sister’s attitude leans closer to entitlement.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
The community was sharply divided, but a clear majority leaned toward NTA, especially among people familiar with fine dining.
Most supported the OP’s concern about disrupting other diners:





Several recommended practical solutions or canceling:


Some defended the sister’s right to parent her way:


A few took a neutral stance:

![[Reddit User] − Eh. I would call the restaurant and ask how they feel about kids that young and go from there.](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/wp-editor-1770023025446-2.webp)
This disagreement reflects a common clash between fine-dining etiquette and modern parenting choices. The restaurant, being upscale and without high chairs, is clearly not designed for infants. Requesting a sitter for one evening shows consideration for other diners who pay for a quiet, refined experience. The sister’s boastful response and insistence feel dismissive of that context.
Offering a trusted, known pediatrician as a sitter is generous, not controlling. If the baby joins anyway, switching to a family-friendly venue would be the kindest compromise. Boundaries around special adult outings are reasonable — no one is obligated to accommodate every parenting preference at every place.
