AITA for not paying for the things that my toddler destroyed?

A disagreement over parenting rules turns into a heated family conflict when a toddler damages household furniture. The situation unfolds during a visit to a grandmother’s home, where differing ideas about discipline, boundaries, and responsibility collide. What begins as a simple babysitting arrangement quickly escalates into accusations, tears, and a question that many parents quietly dread.

What makes the story more complicated is the clash between a structured parenting approach and a permissive grandparent who prides herself on always saying yes. As emotions run high and damage is done, the situation forces everyone involved to confront uncomfortable truths about supervision, authority, and accountability within families.

‘AITA for not paying for the things that my toddler destroyed?’

It all started with a planned family visit meant to strengthen a grandparent-grandchild bond.

I (36F) have a 2,5 years old son. He is energetic and curious, like every child supposed to be. Meltdowns are age appropriate but he usually doesn't do that unless...

I make sure to let him release his energy in playgrounds etc.. everyday so he wouldn't climb furnitures. lol. Our parenting style is similar to that british show called supernanny...

By that I mean, for example, If you don't eat your vegetables, you won't get any deserts. No matter how much you cry won't change that. Or 19:30 is the...

Unless there is an extreme case, %99 of time he will be in his bed, trying not to be in bed to have more fun. We do a little dance...

Things became tense once daily routines clashed with an overly permissive household environment.

My MIL (58F) lives far away from us and invited us to her home so she can see her grandson face to face instead of everyday facetiming. Her home is...

but with our parenting style, if we say no, it means no, so we thought it would be manageable with my 24/7 supervision. What we didn't calculate was my MIL's...

She is a proud people pleaser. She thinks she is like Mother Theresa, but it is actually one of my husband's traumas that he had to act extra aggresive to...

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The breaking point came after rules were repeatedly ignored and damage was done.

She started giving my son choclate cake behind my back, because he refused eating his proper meal and I was like "he will eat when he is hungry". Appearently she...

and since he is refusing the meal, he has to eat something, right? Whenever my son has meltdowns for the things that I wouldn't let him do, she saves him...

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because she couldnt bare watching him cry like it is the end of the world. Thanks to her weeklong actions, now my son thinks my MIL overrides my rules. If...

So now, he doesn't stop crying for a looong time, since eventually his angel of a gramma will save him. Today I woke up with flu, and my MIL volunteered...

After few hours, she came to my room asking for me to pay for her kitchen cabinets. Appearently he was banging a ladle on the cabinet doors and made a...

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She was right there, she wouldn't left him alone of course. "why didn't you take the ladle from his hands?" well he didn't let her... After The meaningless back and...

I just went back to sleep saying "No I won't pay, and it seems like you need to discipline your grandson and be the bad guy for the first time"....

In this case, the core issue is not the damaged cabinets but the ongoing undermining of parental authority. The parent describes a consistent, structured approach designed to help a young child feel secure and learn boundaries. This approach relies on predictability and follow-through, both of which were repeatedly disrupted by the grandmother’s behavior. When rules are overridden, especially in front of a child, confusion and escalating behavior are common outcomes.

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From the grandmother’s perspective, her actions appear motivated by empathy and discomfort with a child’s distress. However, avoiding short-term discomfort can lead to long-term problems, including behavioral escalation and safety risks. Supervision without intervention is not effective supervision, particularly with toddlers who lack impulse control.

Socially, this story highlights a common generational divide. Many grandparents equate indulgence with love, while modern parents often prioritize consistency. Without mutual respect and clear agreements, these differences can damage relationships. Responsibility, in this context, reasonably falls on the adult who was present and in charge at the time of the incident.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Many users strongly supported the parent, emphasizing accountability and proper supervision.

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sopranna23 − NTA. Your son didn't "let" his grandma take the ladle back? Assuming your MIL has perfectly functional hands, she should've easily been able to take a ladle from...

Normally, I would say that parents are responsible for anything their child breaks, but it sounds like Grandma didn't want to discipline your son under any circumstances but has no...

And if your MIL were better about enforcing rules and boundaries in the first place, your son probably wouldn't have been able to get ahold of the ladle and use...

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Sadly, it sounds like these kinds of problems will persist unless you set hard ground rules with your MIL.

It'll take a while to get your son to stop associating his grandma with laxity in the rules, and he'll keep pitting the two of you against each other.

Senator_Bink − NTA. I wouldn't worry about it. If she can't manage to stop a 2-yr-old from denting her cabinets while she's standing right there, she's not going to be...

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Discount_Mithral − NTA. Sounds like grandma f\*cked around and found out. You were doing right by your child, and she decided she knew better.

The price for that sounds like new paint. Hopefully she learns her lesson on this one and grows a bit of a backbone with her grandson.

maybetooenthusiastic − NTA if she literally watched it happen and did nothing. That's on her.

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Lithogiraffe − NTA - I admit when I first read the post title I was biased against OP. But by post body middle, I was rolling my eyes at MIL,...

It sounds like OP's husband is very much aware of this deficit in his mother, and hopefully he has OP's back.

Others offered more balanced perspectives while still respecting the parent’s position.

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asecretnarwhal − NTA. She was the one in charge of the kid and she allowed him to damage her cabinets. But for next time, don’t visit again in person.

It’s unacceptable that she’s undermining you and spoiling him to the point that there are disciplinary issues with him now.

You’re going to have hell to pay when you go home and for that reason alone, I would decline to visit again and leave early if that’s possible.

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Lowten_writer − NTA I don't care what your views are if you are the person responsible for a Child, especially when you volunteer, it's your responsibility to do certain things.

Take appropriate action to prevent them hurting themselves, provide suitable food, provide suitable entertainment, prevent them from causing damage to things.

She neither provided suitable entertainment nor did she prevent him damaging things. Theas are her failures not yours.

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SomeoneYouDontKnow70 − NTA. Why should you pay for the damage caused by your son when your MIL, who volunteered to babysit him, was supposed to be watching him?

If she doesn't want to discipline the child, then she shouldn't volunteer to watch him. Let me tell you a true story about myself.

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My parents left me alone with my grandmother on their date night, and I started chewing on a cord that was plugged into an electrical outlet.

My grandmother, like your MIL, didn't want to make me cry, so she just let me keep chewing on it until I eventually broke through and got electrocuted,

burning a giant hole in the side of my mouth that left a scar that remains over 50 years later. Refusing to discipline a child is not an act of...

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A few commenters added lighter anecdotes to ease the tension.

tinyahjumma − Lord I remember when my MIL handed markers and coloring books while my little ones were sitting on her couch, then panicked when an inch long mark was...

Washable marker. Ma’am, you handed them the instrument of the crime and chose the location yourself. We cleaned the mark off while she was all flustered and looking up upholstery...

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Comfortable_Way_1261 − NTA. My mother is like that as well. She never sais no because "she is grandma". She complains the kids don't listen to her and she cannot take...

She can't turn the tv off though because my son has the remote, how can she possibly be an adult and take it from him? But I digress (lots of...

She has some expensive glasses and when my son was little and liked pulling things, she let him do it to her glasses because "she's grandma". I told her I...

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What I'm trying to say is, it was nice until the kids were small, but now they grew and she complains they don't listen and stuff. I just chose to...

I told her they also try this sh#t with us but we shut it down quickly, unless she does that as well, she'll have a hard time with them.

And of course she doesn't put her foot down so I refuse to engage with her when she wants to complain. It's annoying, it's infuriating, but it's on her.

NTA again, if the kid breaks stuff under her supervision (that she wanted to do in the first place) then it's deffinitely on her. You can't play the nice grandma...

This story highlights how differing parenting philosophies can escalate into serious family conflict when boundaries are ignored. While property damage sparked the argument, the deeper issue revolves around respect, supervision, and shared responsibility.

How should families handle situations where grandparents undermine parental rules? Is financial responsibility tied more to supervision or to parenthood itself? Readers are invited to share their thoughts and experiences.

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