WIBTA for giving my roommate an ultimatum because one of their poisonous pet tarantulas escaped and is currently loose in our room?

A shared apartment should feel safe. Instead, one student says it now feels like a waiting game with a venomous tarantula somewhere in the room. What started as three exotic pets quietly multiplied into more than fifteen, and then things took a turn no one expected: one escaped.

Now five roommates are stuck navigating fear, secrecy, and frustration. Some are sleeping uneasily. One roommate didn’t even know about the loose spider at first. Meanwhile, the tarantula’s owner appears focused on finding her beloved pet for emotional reasons rather than addressing the obvious safety concerns. The tension has reached a breaking point, and an ultimatum is on the table for next year’s housing plans.

WIBTA for giving my roommate an ultimatum because one of their poisonous pet tarantulas escaped and is currently loose in our room?

The uneasy situation began quietly at the start of the school year

It all started at the beginning of the academic year this past August. Said roommate started out with 3 pet tarantulas, but they kept buying more and more until they...

We were all okay when they had 3, but it definitely got out of hand. However, they now have one less tarantula because one of them escaped from its container...

The fear escalated once the poster learned more about the species

Should probably mention that the tarantula (and all of their other tarantulas) is poisonous, can live for months without food, and likes to hide at least 3 feet off the...

I googled what happens when you get bitten by this specific species; none of us will die from it, but we would need to call 911 or drive to the...

There are five of us living together and one of my roommates still doesn’t know about the situation because the roommate who owns the tarantulas is afraid they will snitch.

The rest of us think they should know because they live with us, but they are extremely afraid of spiders and would probably snitch.

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Sleepless nights and rising resentment followed quickly after

My roommates and I that know about the escaped tarantula are really uncomfortable/scared about sleeping at night, let alone being in the room during the day, because we could possibly...

However, the roommate who owns the tarantulas has shown little to no concern for our safety. Today they told me that they want to look for the tarantula because they...

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We feel as though she cares more about her tarantulas than our safety. She also considered not telling me or one of my roommates about the situation, but we found...

With next year’s housing plans approaching, the ultimatum emerged

The three of us who know about it, plus the one who owns the tarantulas, and one other person who currently does not live with us, plan on living together...

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One of my roommates wants to give this ultimatum: limit yourself to 3 tarantulas next year, or you won’t be able to live with us. WIBTA if I went along...

Further details made the situation even more complicated

EDIT: Yes, this is 100% real. Don’t want to give too much away in case roommate sees this but here’s a little more info. Our contract does not allow pets...

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No, it’s not really about the number of spiders, but it’s the fact that they bought more and more without being able to properly take care of all of them.

I’m not saying the tarantulas were neglected in any way, but it’s the fact that one got out which makes it seem like roommate is taking on too much responsibility.

I really wanted to tell roommate who still doesn’t know. Then I found out that they spent a full two hours last night scared and intermittently screaming over a tiny...

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I just don’t know if we should tell them because they might freak out over nothing if the spider has already left the room or is dead. Also want to...

EDIT 2: Just tried to tell the roommate that didn’t know but she already knew about it from another roommate.

At its core, this conflict is about safety and trust. Living with roommates requires a basic level of transparency, especially when something poses a health risk. Even if the tarantula’s bite isn’t fatal, the fact that it could send someone to the hospital changes the dynamic entirely. The fear described by the roommates feels very real.

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From the owner’s perspective, there is likely emotional attachment. Exotic pet owners often develop deep bonds with their animals. That said, attachment doesn’t erase responsibility. When someone brings a potentially dangerous pet into shared housing, the standard of care has to be exceptionally high.

Dr. John Gottman of The Gottman Institute once said, “Trust is built in very small moments.” In roommate situations, those small moments include honesty and accountability. Failing to inform someone about a possible danger can chip away at that trust quickly.

Practically speaking, the roommates should have a direct conversation where expectations are clearly stated. That includes reviewing the lease agreement, discussing comfort levels, and setting firm limits. If the contract prohibits pets, that’s a concrete boundary. An ultimatum may feel harsh, but in shared housing, safety and transparency usually outweigh one person’s hobby.

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Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Many users strongly supported the poster and demanded immediate action

Dietcokeisgod − NTA. Wtf? Your room mate is awful. They need to find the damn spider. And you also need to tell your arachnophobic roommate - it's not fair to...

[Reddit User] − NTA. At this point I’d tell her no tarantulas or find a new place to live. You literally could have to go to the hospital because of...

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G0atDrag0n − Absolutely NTA but small correction because I'm That A__hole™: the tarantulas are venomous, not poisonous. Also, tell the roommate asap. This isn't a snitch situation,

this is a "there is a genuine risk to our collective health" situation. Plus if roomie actually cares about her pet, she'd be pulling the place apart trying to find...

pattisabs − NTA. But you need to tell your other roommate. I have a huge fear of spiders and if someone kept this from me I would be incredibly, incredibly...

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And whoever it is, maybe you should snitch. Living in a room with a poisonous tarantula isn’t a joke, and you should call someone to have it taken care of...

As for your roommate, I think it would be acceptable for you to demand she keeps NO tarantulas, if she’s not capable of keeping them in their containers? That’s a...

Darth_Hufflepuff − NTA. I don't understand how you are calmly living there. I am stressed out just by the thought of a tarantula in my house.

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Others offered more critical or mixed perspectives

DonKanailleSC − Call in professionals to find and remove the spider and send him the bill. Then kick him out because he is obviously an irresponsible person. AND TELL YOUR...

JebbAnonymous − I'm gonna say mild ESH (you being mild) but your roommate with the spiders is a massive a__hole. Why mild ESH? Cause how the hell could you keep...

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unicornhulk − NTA, but why limit it to 3? Would you feel any less uncomfortable if they only had 3 tarantula, and 1 escaped?

CrabbityAnn − Oh hell no! The fact that the roomie didn’t want to tell you and you had to find out from someone else would be enough for me to...

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If you give her this ultimatum, she definitely won’t tell you if it happens again. She can’t be trusted, end of.

Spoiler: the other room mate is gonna be furious when she learns that you -all- knew and betrayed her by not telling her. Hope you weren’t planning on keeping that...

manz02 − ESH You are an a__hole for allowing this to go on so long without telling you’re other roommate. She’s going to feel so betrayed and will never want...

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And I wouldn’t blame her. Your tarantula hoarding roommate sucks the most for not even giving a s__t that a venomous spider is on the loose, putting her roommates at...

Also your roommate is a f__king animal hoarder and you need to call animal control and a g__damn exterminator. This is unacceptable and she should have no tarantulas and no...

And a few couldn’t resist adding humor to ease the tension

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Seannibal − NTA, but I'd seriously consider just burning the house down. 15 tarantulas is one thing but having one escape. .. d__adful!

Samhaincat − ESH why are you trying to protect this person? ?? Fifteen f__king tarantulas? FIFTEEN F__KING TARANTULAS? ?? One of whom is, as we speak, getting comfy in your...

The fact that she did not immediately inform everyone so they had the option to either help look or GTFO and then immediately ripped the apartment apart on the hunt...

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She sucks the most. But you also suck for being 'cool' about this. Having a venemous animal hiding SOMEWHERE in your home (couch cushions? ?? Cereal box??? Baseball cap? ??...

Yunamalia − NTA. Burn the house down. It's the only way to be sure.

sunshinekraken − NTA but I’d reconsider living with that roommate if you have an issue with their pets. I got to looking up tips for finding lost tarantulas because I...

and found some advice I’ll post below, hope it helps . .................................................................................. Longer term, my assumption is that they will move to find a moister environment assuming they cannot get...

At which point I project they will travel searching out moisture. They feel more comfortable moving in dark and like mice, travel along the edge of a room.

hey're likely to hide in a dark, snug place such as the back of furniture, in drawers if they can get in them, under dressers, etc. Be careful walking around...

and periodically check everywhere you can think of. I've placed several damp tissues around, as suggested by people online, and went searching with a flashlight everywhere.

I kind of gave up already, and went to make some tea, and as I was returning to the room it was sitting on the wall near the door. The...

Put out a cloth in a plate of water in the middle of the room. The higher humidity around the plate may lure your spider out of its hide. If...

and make sure the water in the plate is hot. You can also light some candles about the plate. Your spider is very likely to be attracted by the warm...

This may not greatly increase your chances of finding the tarantula, but every little bit helps. If you suspect your spider has already managed to escape from the original room,...

If you haven't succeeded during the day, don't despair. Tarantulas are predominantly nocturnal. They are most active at night, so this is the time your spider may want to wander....

Fluidicy − NTA, op this guy went to the extent of buying 15 f__king tarantulas and it is his responsibility for not taking care of it and letting one escape.

Now he wants to lie to one of your roommates and possibly put him in danger because he wants to save his own ass? Are you kidding OP? Maybe 3...

there is no way in hell you’d be the a__hole for this, hell since he disregarded your guy’s safety and tried to lie to you about everything I think leaving...

Living with roommates always requires compromise, but most people would agree that a loose venomous tarantula crosses a line. The conflict here isn’t just about how many spiders are acceptable. It’s about safety, honesty, and whether everyone in the apartment feels respected. An ultimatum may sound dramatic, yet shared housing only works when trust is intact. So what would you do in this situation—limit the pets, move out, or call in professionals immediately?

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