AITA for making parents cancel their vacation. for trying to scam me?

A babysitter who has worked for the same family for 8–9 months grew tired of being consistently shortchanged—usually $5–$10 per job—despite clear rates. When the parents contacted her for a “big job” (full-day care for their 10th anniversary), she agreed, but arrived to find they had left the 6- and 8-year-old boys alone 45 minutes earlier and again shorted her pay by $15.

Fed up, she called them, refused to continue, threatened to involve police for child abandonment, and waited until they returned to collect the kids. The parents accused her of ruining their anniversary; she walked away. Now she wonders if she went too far by forcing them to cancel and come home.

‘AITA for making parents cancel their vacation. for trying to scam me?’

The babysitter had tolerated repeated shortchanging:

So I've been babysitting for 8-9 months now. there's a family called the johns [fake name] who has 2 boys ages 6-8. I've worked for them a few times.

The problem with them is they almost always "accidentally forgets the price" and shortchanges me, usually $5 or $10 but I get don't get paid much so every dollar counts.

The anniversary job crossed the line:

I got contacted by the johns for a "big job" they wanted me to babysit their children for the entire day while they were doing something for there 10th anniversary....

But Id decided why not I want money. so I get there and find out the parents left 45 min ago. I went to make sure I got the correct...

I decided i had enough, they knew my prices. so I called them and told them im not babysitting. get someone to be scammed.

but then I had an idea. I told them to drive back because I would get the cops on them for leaving their child alone. they told me they would...

I waited with the kids until they came back then I left. they told me I ruined their anniversary but I just left.. so Reddit AITA

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This is a clear case of chronic wage theft and neglectful parenting. The parents repeatedly underpaid despite agreed rates, showing entitlement and disrespect for the sitter’s time and labor. Leaving young children (6 and 8) unsupervised for 45 minutes is dangerous and, in many jurisdictions, constitutes neglect or endangerment—enough grounds for police involvement.

The sitter’s response—refusing to continue unpaid work, insisting they return, and waiting with the children—was responsible and protective. Threatening police was appropriate leverage; she didn’t call them but used the threat to ensure the kids’ safety. The parents’ complaint about “ruining” their anniversary ignores their own choices: they left early, shorted pay again, and assumed she’d accept it.

This isn’t about pettiness; it’s about boundaries and accountability. Babysitters (especially young ones) are often exploited because they fear confrontation. Standing up protects future workers too. The parents should apologize, pay in full (preferably upfront via digital transfer), and never hire her again. If they can’t afford proper care, they can’t afford the outing.

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Check out how the community responded:

The community overwhelmingly voted NTA, praising the sitter for finally standing up after months of being taken advantage of. Many highlighted the parents’ neglect, cheapness, and entitlement, with strong support for involving authorities if needed.

Most focused on the parents’ repeated shortchanging and child abandonment:

morbidnerd − NTA at all. Those people are awful for leaving their kids alone and awful for trying to get one over on you. I'm sure they figured once they...

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alwaystired7 − INFO So they left their 6 and 8 year olds alone for 45 minutes before you got there?

Jannon-Smitty − I don’t feel good about it but I have to say NTA because I can’t stop laughing. You even made them come back, hilarious. That is so deliciously...

They deserve it for underpaying you, but for real you should have said something the first time. Get payed in full or don’t work for them again.

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[Reddit User] − INFO: Why haven't you drawn the line about your prices EVERY single time? "accidentally forgets the price" and shortchanges me, usually $5 or $10 but I get...

The solution would have been to not let them forget and refuse to babysit unless they agree to 15/hour These people still sound horrible but I'm confused why you let...

shillyshally − NTA. So many people asking why you didn't stand up for yourself sooner but, damn, it takes a while to learn to do that in life & some...

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SlayerChartzilla − NTA It sucks for them, but if this were a regular job outside of a home you'd be within your rights to refuse to work without proper compensation....

[Reddit User] − NTA. This isn't the first time they shortchanged you, and they assumed they would get away with it again. They'll have to find a new sucker. Don't...

tinytrolldancer − Nope, NTA. I like the way you handled it.

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thicklover − NTA they were taking advantage of you over the entire 8-9 months you were babysitting for them.

Doofangoodle − INFO: did you arrive on time? It seems odd that they would ask you to arrive 45 minutes after they were due to leave.

Kittytigris − NTA, I wouldn’t have kept babysitting for them after they short changed me the second time. If they wanted you to stay they should have paid on the...

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rlb199779 − NTA, they are horrible parents, good for you!

[Reddit User] − NTA. If they can afford to go out for their anniversary they can afford to pay you, and if they can't afford a babysitter then I guess...

Coollogin − Better solution: Require them to Venmo or PayPal your money.

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Edge80 − NTA - Only accept money upfront before they leave and not after. No exceptions.

You didn’t ruin their anniversary—they did by chronically underpaying you, then abandoning their young kids and expecting free labor. Refusing to babysit unpaid and ensuring the children were safe until parents returned was the responsible choice. Threatening police was justified leverage given the neglect.

The community agrees: NTA. Their pattern of shortchanging shows entitlement; your stand protects your worth and the kids. Never work for them again—require upfront payment via app for future clients. Have you ever had clients/employers try to short you? How did you handle it? Would you have called the police or just left? Share your stories below.

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