AITA for not taking my friend to the airport for not giving me enough notice?

A guy got a series of vague texts from his friend starting in the afternoon, hinting at a favor but not revealing it was an early-morning airport ride until late at night. By then, he was asleep and didn’t see the full request until morning.

The friend fired off an angry midnight message calling him out for costing $40 in ride-share fees. Now the poster wonders if he’s really at fault for not being glued to his phone or if the friend’s indirect, last-minute approach shares the blame.

‘AITA for not taking my friend to the airport for not giving me enough notice?’

It all kicked off with a casual text in the early afternoon that left things hanging:

I have a good friend. He texts me yesterday at 2:00pm asking me “Yoooo can you do me favor?”. Then at 5:00pm when I see it I say “Yo what’s...

Finally, right after that, the friend got to the point:

At 9:00pm he texts me and finally asks me “I was gonna ask if you can take me to the airport 🤣” After the last text I sent him I...

I wake up and see that he sent me a text at 12:30am saying “Just so you know, you hoe for that 😒…. That’s $40 out my pocket”

Reflecting on the whole exchange, the poster stood by his side:

Am I really the a__hole for not taking him to the airport? Sure I could’ve been more attentive to my phone last night but at the same time he could’ve...

and asked me in the first or second message instead of dragging it along all day. He also could’ve asked me a day or two prior.. Edit: Looks like I’ve...

Edit: The day after he said that he was trolling(I don’t believe) and that he asked me too late.

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Favors between friends work best when expectations align early. Asking for help—especially something time-sensitive like transportation—benefits from directness and reasonable advance notice. Vague or drawn-out messaging can frustrate both sides and lead to missed opportunities.

Communication styles vary, but clarity reduces misunderstandings. Relationship experts often point out that “hinting” at needs instead of stating them plainly shifts unnecessary burden onto the other person to guess or chase details.

Personal boundaries around availability matter too. No one is obligated to monitor messages constantly, and last-minute requests carry inherent risk if the recipient isn’t immediately responsive.

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Healthy friendships recover from these mix-ups through honest talk rather than blame. Recognizing shared responsibility—better planning on one side, clearer asking on the other—usually smooths things over faster than digging in heels.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

The online crowd almost unanimously backed the poster as NTA, slamming the friend’s indirect timing and entitlement:

Most zeroed in on poor communication and lack of planning:

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TheTurtleShepard - NTA, his first message should have included all of the information, if not then he had another chance at 7:30 He needs to be more upfront with his...

Kitastrophe8503 - NTA. If you need something short notice you don't use a method of communication you only return every 5-7 business days.

That was 1 text worth of question: "hey, what are you doing tomorrow morning, i need a ride to the airport at Xam" If hes not gonna respond for hours...

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friendlily - NTA. I'm assuming he knew before 2 pm the day before that he needed a ride. And even so, he should have asked directly in that first text....

Others praised the poster’s relaxed responses and shared similar frustrations:

CarmenxXxWaldo - People might give you a hard time for taking 2 hours to respond. But when someone says "can you do me a favor" without saying what it is...

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Masterfully played.   If they can beat around with the request you can beat around with the deny.

diminishingpatience - NTA. It's his responsibility to get to the airport. Presumably he booked his flight in advance but he couldn't be bothered to make the necessary arrangements to get...

Classic sayings popped up repeatedly:

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thechaoticstorm - NTA Lack of planning on his part does not constitute an emergency on yours. This was something that needed to be thoroughly planned out in advance, not through...

Just-a-Prawn - What’s that saying? “Your poor planning does not constitute an emergency on my part”. NTA

Many vented about annoying texting habits:

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WitnessRadiant650 - Why the hell do people message like that. I hate it on teams also. This whole thing could have been avoided if that friend just texted initially, “Can...

locakitty - NTA If i need a favor, I'm writing out the whole ask. "Hey! If you are available at 9 am tomorrow, I'd really love a ride to the...

A couple kept it light:

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daporter4 - Lmao asking last minute then getting mad? NTA. He can Venmo you that $40 for being rude.

This texting mishap turned into a full debate on friendship favors, timing, and straight talk versus beating around the bush.

How do you usually handle favor requests from friends—do you prefer everything upfront in one message, or are you okay with the slow reveal? And when plans fall through because of bad timing, who do you think carries more responsibility: the asker or the potential helper? Share your stories below!

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