AITA for not allowing my brother to bring a random Grindr hook up as his +1 at my wedding?
A 27-year-old woman preparing for her July wedding initially invited her 23-year-old brother and his girlfriend of three years to the small, intimate ceremony limited to family and close friends. After the couple broke up last month, the brother asked to bring a new plus-one: a man he recently met on Grindr and described as someone he “got along great” with. The bride refused, explaining she didn’t want a stranger or recent hookup at the event—regardless of gender—and that the ex had been invited due to the long-term relationship.
The brother accused her of homophobia, claiming she’d have allowed a female replacement, and began spreading the narrative to mutual LGBTQ+ friends and family, causing some to threaten boycotting the wedding. This escalating drama has left the bride defending a boundary while being labeled a “homophobic bridezilla.”

‘AITA for not allowing my brother to bring a random Grindr hook up as his +1 at my wedding?’
The wedding planning started with standard invitations to close relationships.


The brother’s request for a new plus-one centered on a recent Grindr connection.



What makes the conflict explosive is the brother’s accusation and campaign against the couple.





Small weddings often limit plus-ones to established partners to maintain intimacy and keep guest lists manageable. Treating a three-year girlfriend differently from a brand-new date aligns with common etiquette, regardless of gender or how the couple met.
The brother’s accusation of homophobia shifts the issue from logistics to identity politics, weaponizing a sensitive topic for personal gain. What complicates matters further is his recent coming out (implied by the shift from a long-term girlfriend), which may heighten his sensitivity to perceived rejection.
Socially, weaponizing LGBTQ+ identity to pressure others undermines genuine allyship and risks alienating supportive friends and family. Clear communication about boundaries—emphasizing relationship length over gender—can defuse misunderstandings, though deliberate distortion makes resolution harder. Weddings amplify emotions, but manufacturing drama over a reasonable rule rarely ends well for the instigator.
See what others had to share with OP:
Many users strongly supported the bride, condemning the brother’s manipulative accusations.




















Several offered nuanced support while advising kinder language.





One commenter shifted to YTA based on wording.





Most agreed the bride is not the asshole for enforcing consistent plus-one rules based on relationship length rather than gender, while sharply criticizing the brother’s manipulative tactics. Several urged clearer, less judgmental communication to avoid fueling misinterpretations.
Would you allow a sibling’s very new date—met on any app—as a plus-one to a small wedding? How would you handle a family member spreading false accusations to mutual friends over a guest list decision?
