AITA for not chipping in for our dinner group’s babysitting costs?

A woman, part of a long-standing group of five high school friends, faced backlash after refusing to pay $100 for a babysitter hired to watch her four friends’ children during their monthly dinner outing. As the only one without kids, she paid for the group’s dinner when it was her turn but was shocked when her friends demanded she also cover the babysitting cost, arguing she benefits from their “child-free” company. Sticking to her stance that she shouldn’t pay for their kids, she’s now causing a rift in the group and wonders if she’s wrong.

This heated friendship dispute has ignited a passionate online debate, with most supporting her refusal and condemning her friends’ entitlement. Was she wrong to refuse to pay? Let’s dive into the story, the group dynamics, and the community’s perspective.

‘AITA for not chipping in for our dinner group’s babysitting costs?’

The conflict arose from the group’s dinner routine:

I've had the same group of girlfriends since high school, there are five of us. Each have a kid - well, except me. We do dinner about once a month...

At dinner, we take turns paying. Everyone generally orders about the same amount of stuff, one a__oholic drink and we split 2 bottles of sparkling water for the table along...

The issue emerged after her turn to pay:

After dinner, the person responsible for the week pays, and then I assume they all head back to the house the babysitter is at to pick up the kids (I...

I paid for dinner as normal, and hugged everyone goodbye. When I got home, I had a flurry of texts from the group, saying that I owed $100. I asked...

Her friends’ demand sparked conflict:

They said because it was my week to pay, I was also expected to pay for the babysitter "because all of us get the pleasure of being out without kids"....

I'm sticking to my guns and not paying but my friends think I am being unfair for not being willing to "pay my share" of the babysitting.. What share? I...

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But maybe I am? This wouldn't be a financial imposition on me, but it sure seems unfair.. AITA for refusing to kick in for babysitting when I don't have any...

Edit: Everyone is asking where the dads are, since they hired a babysitter they do boys/girls nights on the same night to take maximum advantage of hiring a sitter.

This situation highlights the tension between group expectations and individual fairness, particularly when lifestyle differences, like having children, impact shared activities. The woman’s refusal to pay for her friends’ babysitting costs is reasonable, as she has no children benefiting from the service and was not consulted about the expectation beforehand. Her friends’ argument that she benefits from their “child-free” company is entitled, as it shifts the financial burden of their parenting choices onto her, undermining the group’s previously equitable dinner arrangement.

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Social psychologist Dr. Susan Fiske notes, “Group norms can create pressure to conform, but fairness requires mutual agreement on shared costs” (Social Beings, 2009). The friends’ failure to discuss the babysitting cost expectation before her turn to pay was a communication breakdown, and their insistence that she owes a “share” disregards her child-free status. A better approach would have been for the group to propose splitting the babysitting cost among the four parents or discussing alternative arrangements, like hosting dinners at home with the kids present.

Moving forward, the woman should calmly reiterate her stance, emphasizing that she values the dinners but cannot cover costs unrelated to her. Suggesting a group discussion to clarify future expectations, such as separating dinner and babysitting payments, could prevent further conflict. If the friends persist, she may need to reassess the friendship, as your past discussions about fairness in family and social dynamics (e.g., not paying for others’ choices) suggest you value equitable boundaries.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

The Reddit community overwhelmingly labeled the woman NTA, condemning her friends’ entitled expectation that she pay for their babysitting costs and urging her to stand firm, with some suggesting she reconsider the friendships.

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Many criticized the friends’ entitlement:

slendermanismydad − They said, you get the pleasure of hanging out with us I would never ever be able to say something like that with a straight face.

Ancient-Character556 − NTA, you don’t even have a kid why should you pay for their baby sitter? this should have been something discussed beforehand, it’s rude and entitled for them...

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on the other hand if it was something you agreed to then backed out last minute, you would be TA. There definitely should have been a conversation about that.

eepithst − LOL. NTA. When you have kids you take on the financial burden of caring for those kids and yep, getting a babysitter is part and parcel of that.

You didn't impregnate them, so it's not your responsibility. What a ridiculous take. You get the pleasure of no kids every day for free. They get the pleasure of kids...

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forgetregret1day − That’s a very interesting perspective from your fiends. It’s also bat s__t crazy. I’ve heard a lot of excuses from parents who think the world should pay for...

I’d have a hard time not laughing at this request. You paid for their dinner like you all do. If you’d been told beforehand that you were also on the...

Fair-Ad-7258 − NTA Your friends are crazy, they chose to have children not you.

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Others emphasized the lack of prior discussion:

LittleMsSavoirFaire − You're NTA, but I don't think you'll win this battle in any satisfying way. Four sets of entitled parents have decided you should pay for their choices,

they're not going to change their minds when they have the majority and it benefits them so much. You might have to say goodbye to these so-called "friendships".

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breetome − All that after only one cocktail, I figured for sure they were drunk as skunks. It's never anyone's responsibility to pay a babysitter except for the parents of...

Huge no freaking way. That's so incredibly entitled I can’t believe it. Huge hell no! Your kids your problem your dime. They’re out of their dang minds!

Some questioned the group’s logistics:

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WallabyInTraining − This story doesn't make sense. These 4 women have partners, right? Why don't they take care of the kids for one night? (I refuse to call it babysitting...

And they all pounced on you? All 4 individually thought it was reasonable to expect this from you without any heads up or conversation? That seems unlikely. Not impossible, but...

HunterDangerous1366 − If I said this to my friends, they'd laugh in my face. The entitlement is astounding. They want you to pay for the privilege of their company? Only...

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Do they really need a sitter? Surely at least one of them has a S/O or baby daddy who can watch their kid when it’s dinner date day. NTA. If...

Princess-Reader − I’d die on this hill! I would NOT pay for a baby sitter. Do any of these children have fathers! ???!

Others highlighted the financial burden:

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NoFee4250 − 4 people can't each pay $25 for the babysitter? Honestly, that's a pretty good rate for a night out. 52 weeks divided by 5 is 10.4. If you...

So you are paying $1000/year for the pleasure of their company. You could take a decent vacation for $1000. What happens if they have more kids and the babysitting rate...

Whose_my_daddy − NTA Do they expect you to pay their transportation costs too?

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Some suggested alternative solutions or reevaluation:

PNL-Maine − Show your “friends” this post, see their reaction.

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Zooph − "you get the pleasure of hanging out with us" Yeah, that right there tell me to run.

Fun-Yellow-6576 − NTA. You don’t have kids, it’s their costs.

The woman’s refusal to pay for her friends’ babysitting costs was widely supported by the Reddit community, who labeled her NTA for standing against their entitled demand that she cover expenses for their children.

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They criticized the lack of prior discussion and urged her to hold firm, with some suggesting she reconsider the friendships if the pressure continues. What do you think? Was she wrong to refuse to pay for the babysitter, or was her stance justified? Share your thoughts!

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