AITA for cutting my wife’s stepmother off from my kids until she deletes her Instagram account?

A couple with two young kids and another on the way has always drawn a firm line: no photos of their children online without permission. This rule, set from the birth of their eldest, stems from a shared concern over privacy in a digital world full of risks. Yet, one family member keeps crossing it—the wife’s stepmother, who has ignored repeated warnings for years.

The latest incident hit during a New Year’s beach getaway with relatives. Back home, photos surfaced on the stepmother’s Instagram, including sneaky shots of the children in swimsuits. Frustrated after endless deletions and promises broken, the parents issued an ultimatum: delete the account or lose all contact with the kids. Now, with the father-in-law urging leniency due to her budding social media earnings, the couple wonders if they’re overreacting in prioritizing their children’s safety.

AITA for cutting my wife's stepmother off from my kids until she deletes her Instagram account?

Everything started with a clear family policy on privacy right from the first child’s birth.

My wife and I have two children (8M and 5F) and we’re expecting a third. Since our eldest was born, we have been clear and consistent about not wanting pictures...

Most relatives respected the boundary without issue, but tension built with one persistent violator.

Most of our friends and family have no problem with that, but we’ve had problems with my wife’s stepmother. She has, on several occasions, posted photos of our children on...

Most are harmless (pictures of her with them or family photos with more people in them), but there have been a few times she took pictures of the kids behind...

Each discovery led to immediate demands for removal, met with compliance but no lasting change.

Every time we see a photo of our children on her Instagram page, we tell her to delete it. She always does, but the next time she sees them, it...

The breaking point came after a family beach vacation over New Year’s.

Anyway, my family spent New Year’s Eve at a rented beach house with some of my wife’s paternal family. We returned home on Jan. 1st. That same day, my wife’s...

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Buried between them were three photos of our kids on the beach. They’re both wearing swimsuits and (except for one of the pictures) don’t seem aware they’re being photographed.

After consulting, the parents decided enough was enough, linking the issue directly to her online presence.

My wife and I talked, and we both agreed we’ve given her stepmother enough chances. As long as she’s active on social media, she will continue posting pictures of our...

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They delivered the consequences via a direct call, standing firm despite her emotional pleas.

We called her yesterday and said that she won’t be allowed to see our kids unless she deletes her Instagram account. That means she won't have any kind of contact...

She cried during the call, and tried to promise us she would delete the New Year’s Eve post and never do anything like this again, but we told her we...

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Even the father-in-law, aligned on privacy, pushed back on the severity, citing her affection and new income stream.

My father-in-law (who is also against posting pictures of children on social media) called my wife last night. He agreed that her stepmother crossed a line, but said cutting her...

He said she has just started to make money with social media, but she also loves our kids very much, and it's cruel to force her to choose.. I don’t...

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The core issue here centers on parental authority over children’s digital footprints versus a grandparent’s disregard for those boundaries. The OP and wife have consistently communicated their no-posting rule since 2013, yet the stepmother’s repeated violations—spanning five years—escalate from harmless group shots to covert beach photos of kids in swimsuits. This pattern erodes trust, especially as the family expands with a third child, amplifying privacy stakes in an era where child images can attract predators or exploitation.

From the stepmother’s side, her actions might stem from generational gaps or excitement over social media monetization. The father-in-law notes she’s just earning from it, suggesting posts of grandchildren boost engagement for algorithms favoring family content. However, this overlooks consent; using minors’ images for profit without permission borders on unethical, potentially violating platform policies like Instagram’s rules against non-consensual minor photos.

Socially, opinions split on family loyalty versus individual rights. Many view the cutoff as justified self-protection, arguing grandparents must earn access through respect. Others, like the father-in-law, see it as harsh, prioritizing emotional bonds over tech habits. A 2022 study by the American Psychological Association highlights how unauthorized online sharing can lead to long-term identity risks for kids, reinforcing parental vigilance.

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Expert insight underscores this: “Parents have the ultimate responsibility for safeguarding their children’s privacy online, and repeated boundary violations warrant firm consequences to prevent escalation,” says Dr. Jenny Radesky, a pediatrician at the University of Michigan and co-author of AAP media guidelines ( source). Beyond that, alternatives like supervised visits without devices could bridge gaps, but trust rebuild requires verifiable change.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

Readers overwhelmingly back the parents’ stance, stressing that endless warnings demanded real action to shield the kids from online exposure.

canyonemoon − NTA "she's just started making money off of social media" translates in my mind to "she knows that posting kids will help with engagement and pay more", and...

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Stand your ground. You've given her a choice, since she won't accept it you can now give her a deadline or you'll make the choice for her. Permanently.

OkStrength5245 − Well. Either she makes the choice, or you do. Your offer expires in a week. After that, she definitively excluded.

Turmeric_Ping − NTA. She doesn't get to make money off of violating your kid's privacy. Doubtless pictures of the kids get her good 'engagement', and the rush this gives her...

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It may be cruel to force her to choose, but you have no reasonable recourse other than to do so. Even if she does delete her account, she may make...

BlueGreen_1956 − NTA She kept doing it because she never suffered any actual consequences for doing it. You should have given her ONE chance. Sort of off topic story: I...

It's a place where juveniles are housed until they go to court or are sentenced for whatever they have done. We were always aware of what each of the teens...

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Nearly every one of them had the same story. "I did this and got a slap on the hand. I did it again and got a slap on the hand....

Some comments urge nuance, balancing family healing with firm lines on mental well-being.

Mela777 − NTA. If you want to compromise, perhaps her photo-taking devices could be given in to the care of your wife or your FIL for the duration of your...

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Bibliophile_w_coffee − NTA. You aren’t forcing her to choose, she already made a choice to disrespect you both every time it happened for the last 5 years…all you are doing...

A few lighten the mood, poking fun at boundary-blind relatives in the social era.

dontgiveatoss − "makes money off social media"? !?!?!? WTF so she may even be using the photos as "content" on her account? !?!

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Personally I wouldn't want her to delete her IG account, but I would confiscate her phone whenever she visited and not get it back till she's int he car. some...

CawlinAlcarz − NTA, but there is a better way to handle this. Posting photographs of minors without parental consent or knowledge constitutes a breach of the Instagram's Community Guidelines and/or...

They have a specific reporting form for just this thing. Instagram has a "strike" program, where you get a strike against your account if you violate their Community Guidelines or...

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If you accumulate too many strikes against your account, Instagram will temporarily disable or may even deplatform the account. So. .. here is what I suggest: Tell your step monther-in-law...

Instagran will delete the post, and she will begin to accumulate strikes against her account, which will lead to Instagram either disabling or deleting the account outright.

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This will let her keep her Instagram account and whatever revenue she is generating from it, but will also put her on notice that if she continues to violate your...

You should look into whatever other social media platforms she's using and do the research on posting photos of minors on those platforms, too. I'm willing to bet there are...

Hungry_Goose492 − You've been telling her to stop doing this for FIVE YEARS? NTA.

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[Reddit User] − NTA. It’s a shame it had to come to this point for the stepmother to take your wishes seriously.

This situation highlights the clash between family affection and digital privacy, where repeated breaches forced a tough boundary. The parents acted to protect their children after years of ignored requests, though the stepmother’s tears and new earnings add emotional layers. Whether the cutoff sticks or evolves into monitored access remains open.

What would you do in their shoes—hold the line or seek middle ground? Share your thoughts below.

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