AITA for not fulfilling a venmo request?
A fun snowboarding weekend with friends quickly turned tense when a random guy they met on the gondola ended up not just joining the group — but walking straight into their shared Airbnb, hopping in the shower, and crashing on the couch for the night. The only woman in the group felt increasingly uneasy as the day went on.
She repeatedly voiced her discomfort to her boyfriend and his three friends about giving a complete stranger the door code and letting him stay overnight especially since none of the bedroom doors even had locks. They waved her concerns away, insisting the guy was “chill” and harmless. Now, back home, a Venmo request for the full $300 share has arrived, unchanged despite six people using the space. She’s pushing back hard — and people online are weighing in with strong opinions.

‘AITA for not fulfilling a venmo request?’
It all started when the group was enjoying their snowboarding trip and unexpectedly met a stranger on the gondola:


Then the stranger got invited to hang out all day and things quickly spiraled:




The tension hit its peak when they arrived back and found the stranger already inside:




After the trip, the Venmo request arrived and she decided to take a stand:




She later added more context about the safety concerns:








The heart of this conflict isn’t a few dollars — it’s about whose sense of safety gets taken seriously. As the only woman in a group staying at a remote Airbnb with no bedroom door locks, she suddenly found herself sharing space with a complete stranger who had the entry code, used their shower, and slept on the couch. When she repeatedly expressed discomfort and was met with “he’s chill” every time, it became painfully clear that her fear was being treated as less important than the group’s casual vibe.
Men and women frequently perceive the same situation very differently when strangers enter private spaces. For many women, the presence of an unknown man in a locked-down rental — especially when sleeping — automatically raises legitimate concerns about personal safety. This isn’t overreaction; it’s informed by both statistics and real-life stories. The group’s relaxed attitude reflects a common blind spot: assuming a friendly stranger is harmless, a perspective that rarely carries the same weight for women.
The friends have a reasonable financial argument: the Airbnb cost didn’t change whether five or six people used the living room. The stranger didn’t occupy a bedroom or increase any expense. Asking for a discount after the trip can feel like retroactive punishment for something that “ended up fine.” Yet for her, the money became the only remaining way to signal that her ignored boundary actually mattered.
The real solution lies in prevention, not post-trip arguments. Groups should agree upfront: no outside guests without full consensus, no sharing codes with strangers, and anyone who stays contributes something — even if small. When one person’s comfort is consistently sidelined, especially in a gender-imbalanced group, it’s usually a sign the travel dynamic needs reevaluating. Clear rules and mutual respect before booking can prevent this kind of resentment from building.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
The internet was sharply divided — some stood firmly with her safety concerns, while others thought she took the money issue too far:
Many strongly supported her feeling unsafe, especially as the only woman:












Others agreed the safety issue mattered, but felt the money fight was misplaced:






One commenter highlighted a surprising double standard:







She eventually paid the full amount — but the money was never really the point. It was about feeling safe in a place she helped pay for, and having those fears completely dismissed by the people she was supposed to trust most. The story shines a light on how wildly different the same situation can feel depending on gender — especially when strangers end up inside your private space.
What would you have done in her shoes? Paid quietly and moved on? Held the line on the money? Spoken up even more forcefully the moment the door code was shared? Drop your thoughts below — I’d love to hear what you think.
