AITA for renting out my other house at a reduced rate to my sister with kids?

Owning property can bring financial stability. It can also bring family complications. When this 34-year-old landlord decided to rent his second house to one sister at a reduced rate, he believed he was simply helping where the need was greatest.

The issue? Another sister had asked for the same deal before and was turned down. Now she feels sidelined and claims he is playing favorites. He insists he is not their parent and does not owe anyone equal treatment. The internet quickly weighed in on whether generosity toward one sibling automatically becomes unfairness toward another.

AITA for renting out my other house at a reduced rate to my sister with kids?

He explained why he made the offer in the first place

Basically what the title says. I(34M) have another house I usually rent out. My sister’s family and has been crammed renting tiny apartments with no backyards so I offered to...

It’s in a good neighborhood and we live nearby. The school is great and all our kids are close to each other and they can spend time and play after...

But this decision reopened an old request

My other sister has asked me before whether she and her fiancé could rent the same place from me and I’ve always refused because they weren’t able to afford it...

Now she’s angry and saying it’s unfair but in my defense, I don’t understand why I have to be fair? I’m her brother not dad and I don’t owe her...

He later clarified that financial struggle was not the same in both cases

Info: My other sister and her fiancé are not struggling. But our city is expensive and the place they’re able to afford is like 45 minutes away from their workplace....

ADVERTISEMENT

At the heart of this conflict is the tension between fairness and personal choice. From a purely practical standpoint, he owns the property. He has the legal and financial right to rent it to whomever he chooses, at whatever price he deems appropriate.

Emotionally, however, families often operate on perceived equality. When one sibling receives a visible benefit that another previously requested and was denied, feelings of rejection can surface. The issue may not be money alone. It may be about perceived value and priority within the family structure.

Family therapist Dr. John Gottman of The Gottman Institute has noted, “Trust is built in very small moments.” In sibling relationships, those moments can include fairness, validation, and acknowledgment. When someone feels overlooked, even unintentionally, resentment can quietly build.

ADVERTISEMENT

A productive approach might involve open acknowledgment rather than defensiveness. He could explain that his decision centered on supporting children and improving their stability, rather than ranking his sisters’ worth. Clarifying intent and validating hurt feelings does not require changing the decision. It simply preserves long-term relationships.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Some commenters believed he was within his rights

AprilL4163 − NAH. You don't have to do anything for her but I can't fault her for being upset and having hurt feelings that you have prioritized your other sister....

ADVERTISEMENT

TheGingerCynic − I(34M) have another house I usually rent out My sister’s family and has been crammed renting tiny apartments with no backyards so I offered to let them rent...

and her fiancé could rent the same place from me and I’ve always refused because they weren’t able to afford it and I wasn’t willing to reduce the price You...

It's a fair point that you've given preferential treatment to the sister with kids, because you have. Their need may be greater, but that wasn't on the cards when you...

ADVERTISEMENT

Offering that isn't an a__hole move, and her accepting it isn't either. You previously rejected a similar offer from your other sister, so she's got every right to be upset...

Seems like the big difference was that there were kids involved. NAH But be prepared to have this pop up with your parents and other relatives.

Whether what you did was right or not, you still made that call, and a lot of people aren't above calling family out for stuff like this.

ADVERTISEMENT

DonNemo − You don’t *have* to be equitable in your treatment of family members. You do have to live with the consequences though. NTA, but your other sister has every...

Similar_Imagination6 − I am also child free but I need my fellow child free people to understand that supporting children is always going to be more important than stable adults.

They literally have no control over their situation. Also if I’m reading this correctly the sister he did give the reduced rent to is in financial trouble and the sister...

ADVERTISEMENT

Shephard815 − Why wouldn't you have rented to your other sister though? You clearly stated that it was because she couldn't afford i

and then you lower the price for your other sister. At the end of the day, it's your property and you can do as you please but that was definitely...

Others felt the favoritism was hard to ignore

ADVERTISEMENT

sexybeast1146 − YTA because I can understand why your other sister is upset. Do you have to be fair? No, of course not. But you're clearly playing favorites, and you're...

ReceptionPuzzled1579 − YTA. One sister asked you said no but offered to the sister who didn’t ask. And yes I understand kids was the factor. And that it’s your property...

And again, you are right, you don’t owe either sister anything. But it is an AH move because both sisters are in need, but you only recognise one’s need as...

ADVERTISEMENT

You can prioritise one’s need without dismissing the other’s. And yes reducing ones daily commute does have a positive effect on ones life so it is a need.

You are NTA for prioritising the needs of kids over the need to reduce a daily commute. But you are TA for being so dismissive of it, dismissing it comes...

But as you say you don’t owe her anything, one would however think that the very least you owe a sibling is not to be so disregarding of their lives.

ADVERTISEMENT

Kenobi_01 − Don't pretend you didn't play favourites here. You're *allowed* to play favourites. She's not entitled to anything. It's entirely up to you.

But don't pretend for a moment that you haven't prioritised one sister over the other, or expect her not to take notice of the treatment.

elsehwere − YTA, not for renting at a reduced rate to one sister but for being seemingly unable to understand why this would bother your other sister who has previously...

ADVERTISEMENT

What is even your rationale? Maybe explain it to your angry sister instead of saying 'whatever, why should i? '

ext2523 − INFO What's the reduced price that the sister with kids is paying and what is the price that the other sister wanted?

And a few focused on empathy over legality

ADVERTISEMENT

fgvkfea615 − NAH. Sure your sister isn't entitled to rent your property at a reduced rate but you then turned around to your other sister and offered her what you...

She's angry upset because you've essentially told her you she matters less to you than your other sister. You're technically not an AH but you seem to be lacking a...

ADVERTISEMENT

dpdragonfly − NAH. It's OPs property, he can do whatever he wants with it. However, I would be upset too if I wasn't given the same opportunity as my sister...

because I don't have children. It often feels like the world "punishes" people for not having kids (and yes, I do have a kid).

rainbow_wallflower − YTA. You're punishing one sister because she doesn't have children.

ADVERTISEMENT

jumpingissad − I wonder if the childless sister wanted to move into a house BEFORE having kids. It could be that she now is delaying getting pregnant to secure proper...

If that is the case YTA because children would have been involved regardless. If in 5 years you’re cf sister is struggling with kids will you reevaluate your other sisters...

NoFleas − You don't have to be fair but it makes YTA in this scenario.

ADVERTISEMENT

Legally, he can rent his property however he chooses. Emotionally, families rarely operate on legal logic alone. By prioritizing the sister with children, he made a choice rooted in practical support for kids. At the same time, that decision left his other sister feeling less important. Was this a reasonable prioritization of need, or a case of clear favoritism? If you were in his position, would you handle it differently?

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *