AITA for banning my cousin after he disrespected my home and my relationship?

A 25-year-old man lives with his girlfriend and is temporarily letting his younger brother stay after a layoff. They invited their polyamorous cousin over for a nostalgic dinner featuring their late grandmother’s recipe. The cousin arrived alone (his live-in partner had plans) and immediately began openly flirting with the girlfriend — touching her body, complimenting her perfume, asking sexually explicit questions about the boyfriend’s performance, and later poking at her thigh tattoo.

The boyfriend pulled him aside and asked him to stop. The cousin dismissed the request, saying he “doesn’t respect exclusivity” and calling the boyfriend controlling. When the behavior continued, the boyfriend kicked him out. He now plans to ban the cousin permanently from their home, but the brother says the flirting was “too minor” and that he should respect the cousin’s poly beliefs. Is the boyfriend the asshole?

‘AITA for banning my cousin after he disrespected my home and my relationship?’

The dinner started with good intentions:

I (25M) live with my girlfriend “Hailey”. My brother “Jack” (24M) is staying at our place temporarily because he got laid off. A few days ago, Jack and I decided...

None of us are super close, but we were making a dish that my deceased grandma used to cook, and we thought Wes would enjoy the “walk down memory lane.”

Something to note here: Wes is poly, and he doesn’t believe in exclusivity or closed relationships. He’s seeing a guy and two ladies currently, one of the ladies lives with...

The flirting began almost immediately:

Well, this dinner was Wes’ first time meeting Hailey, and he wouldn’t stop hitting on her. She seemed to think he was just being friendly, but he kept touching her...

The boyfriend tried to handle it privately:

I eventually pulled him aside and we went to the backyard. I told him to stop putting moves on my girlfriend.

He didn’t deny it; he just said that “I should know he doesn’t respect exclusivity” and I’m being controlling of my girlfriend. I told him one more wrong move and...

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Well, when we went back inside, he sat on the couch by Hailey. She has a big tattoo on her thigh and wears shorts to show it. He started poking...

That was it for me. I told him he was disrespecting my home and relationship and needed to leave immediately. We argued a bit, but then Wes left. Neither Hailey...

Now, I intend to ban my cousin from coming over ever again. However, Jack says it’s his cousin too, and although the flirting was rude, it’s too minor to ban...

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He also says that because Wes has a different idea about relationships than we do, I should just respect his ideals.. Who is the a__hole here?

Touching someone’s body (especially thighs) without consent, making sexual comments about their partner, and continuing after being explicitly told to stop is sexual harassment — not “flirting” and not excused by polyamory. Polyamory requires enthusiastic consent from everyone involved; it does not grant blanket permission to pursue anyone regardless of their relationship status.

The cousin’s line “I don’t respect exclusivity” is gaslighting and entitlement. Respecting someone’s relationship structure is a basic social expectation — just as monogamous people are expected not to hit on poly individuals in committed group dynamics. The boyfriend’s response (private warning → immediate removal after violation) was proportionate and appropriate for his own home.

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The brother’s opinion (“too minor,” “respect his ideals”) is irrelevant — it is not his house, and he is a guest. Defending the behavior while living rent-free adds an extra layer of entitlement. The girlfriend’s comfort level should have been the priority; her non-intervention does not equal consent or approval.

This is not about “poly vs. mono” — it’s about basic respect and consent in someone else’s home. The boyfriend is not the asshole; the cousin is. Banning him is a reasonable boundary.

Check out how the community responded:

Almost every commenter agreed the boyfriend is NTA — the cousin’s behavior was disrespectful and inexcusable regardless of poly beliefs:

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NorthernLitUp − NTA. First of all, you warned Wes and he blew you off. Second, Jack gets no say in this. He's a guest in your home and it wasn't...

I do wonder, however, how Hailey felt about all of this? Some women might feel that you "defending her honor" was bit misogynistic and perhaps she can stand up for...

Alarmed_Handle_6427 − Wes is quite clearly the a__hole here. His behavior has nothing to do with him being poly and everything to do with him being a disrespectful creep. (Source,...

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EDIT: Also, if it’s his MO to shame and gaslight people into questioning whether or not they’re bigots when they are simply enforcing their boundaries then he’s a special kind...

That honestly makes me question if he’s authentically poly or just a narcissist who requires multiple people to feed his ego.

EliteEmerz − NTA Your cousin told you to your face he doesn’t care or respect your exclusivity. If he wants you to respect his choice to be poly, he should...

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Add to that he’s hollering at your lady in your home with (basically) his middle finger up? Yeah I’d kick him out too. And I know I’m the AH for...

He can have a say in who comes in and out of his own home, but surely not the one he’s been granted free or cheap rent to live in...

Choactapus − NTA- As far as I know being poly doesn't mean you actively try to seduce the SO of friends and family members.

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Just because his relationship is open to multiple partners doesn't mean that your relationship is open to him being a part of it.

I get the impression that Wes just uses being poly as an excuse to hit on whoever he likes without regards to who he may be hurting by doing so.

He seems to me the kind of person who would insult people under the guise of 'I'm just joking' or play 'pranks' that are an excuse to be mean.

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ganache98012 − NTA, but your cousin is. You respectfully pulled him aside and set a boundary, and he crossed it. You were right to ask him to leave and to...

He's dangerously close to crossing over into TA territory by claiming Wes's behavior--that wasn't uncomfortable to him--was 'too minor.' And that 'respect for ideals' thing goes both ways. He's welcome...

Ctdstryr1 − NTA and the fact that this happened in your home is irrelevant. Your poly cousin explicitly flirting with your monogamous partner is disrespectful in your living room,

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at the grocery store, on the bus, in the library, etc. Having an open relationship is only OK if everyone involved consents.

theshadowppl9 − NTA Wes should also respect your guys' relationship choices. Juat because he is poly, doesn't give him the right to be flat out rude like that. Respect goes...

RagdollSeeker − NTA His beliefs are irrelevant. If he wants to have open relationships, that is his choice. However, he can not use that as an excuse to be creepy...

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Caribe92 − Wes needs to learn that poly views doesn’t give him the right to touch someone without permission. That’s inappropriate physical bordering on s__ual misconduct.

IChooseYouSnorlax − Jack is an a__hole. He wants YOU to respect Wes' relationship ideals, whilst Wes is blatantly disregarding yours. No.

Respect goes both ways, and until Wes and Jack understand that, Jack is free to see his cousin elsewhere. Wes is an a__hole for trying it on with your partner,...

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dioor − NTA. *You should know that he doesn’t respect exclusivity? * Well, he should know that it’s fucked up to put the moves on his cousins monogamous girlfriend, regardless...

idrow1 − Oh, hell, no. It's not minor to ban him for shamelessly hitting on your girlfriend even after you told him to knock it off.

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Not believing in exclusivity does not give you the right to trample all over someone else's beliefs, especially in their own home. Your cousin is rude and disrespectful. I would...

fuckyourcanoes − he just said that “I should know he doesn’t respect exclusivity” and I’m being controlling of my girlfriend. F__k this guy right in the ear. What an unbelievable...

He can not practice exclusivity all he wants, but that doesn't mean he gets to put the moves on everyone he likes the look of. He absolutely does have to...

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This is exactly the kind of fuckboy who gives polyamory a bad name. (I'm not poly, but a lot of my friends are poly and/or swingers, so I'm very familiar...

and if they did they'd be enthusiastically shunned. ) NTA, and don't let him come back until/unless you get a sincere apology that convinces you that he actually understands what...

Hillman314 − NTA. I’m more disappointed in Jack saying you need to respect Wes’s behavior. Tell Jack to bend over because you like f**king family in the ass. If he...

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The boyfriend bears primary responsibility for the ruined day. Knowing fulmars defend their nests by projectile-vomiting foul, burning oil — and knowing his girlfriend is easily grossed out — he had a duty to provide a clear, specific warning rather than a vague “stay far away, they get angry.” The term “far away” is subjective, and 15 feet proved dangerously close.

Deliberately withholding the disgusting detail to spare her feelings backfired, causing far greater distress when she was drenched in vomit. While the girlfriend could have asked follow-up questions or maintained greater distance from wildlife, she relied on his prior knowledge. The failure to communicate fully and accurately rests mainly on him. A sincere apology and shared laughter afterward would have salvaged the vacation more effectively than defensiveness.

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