AITA for not wanting to sleep on the pull-out?
A blended-family vacation at a luxury resort has turned into a bedroom battleground, with one mom refusing to sacrifice the king bed to her boyfriend’s preteen kids while she and her partner pay thousands for the trip. She’s happy to upgrade to a bigger suite, but he refuses to spend extra—yet insists his 13- and 11-year-old get the real bed while the adults take the notoriously uncomfortable pull-out couch. What makes this dispute sting even more is his habit of sleeping on a cot during his own custody trips just to spoil his children.
For the mom chasing a lively 5-year-old all day, decent sleep isn’t a luxury—it’s survival. Now she’s wondering if demanding the bed makes her the villain, or if letting preteens claim the only proper mattress on a fortune-spent getaway is the real overindulgence.

‘AITA for not wanting to sleep on the pull-out?’
The couple agreed to split the sky-high cost, but can’t agree on who actually gets to sleep comfortably.


His habit of self-sacrifice on his own trips has become the new relationship standard.

She’s wondering if giving preteens the king is crossing from kindness into entitlement.

Family-travel experts agree: when adults are footing the bill, they deserve the only real bed in the room—full stop. Travel writer and parent-coach Christine Knight explains that while co-parenting guilt often drives excessive sacrifice, turning a rare luxury vacation into another act of martyrdom teaches kids entitlement instead of gratitude.
What turns this from preference into fairness is the money factor: both partners are paying equally, yet only one side’s children would get premium sleep while a toddler’s mom suffers back pain. Child psychologist Dr. Becky Kennedy warns that consistently prioritizing children’s comfort over parents’ basic needs creates “little emperors” who expect the world to bend for them forever.
As Hilton’s former VP of family travel Lisa Cohen told Travel + Leisure in 2024: “Pull-out couches are universally terrible. Any parent who’s paid resort rates knows the king bed is the bare minimum reward for surviving theme-park lines and buffet meltdowns all day.” Refusing to upgrade while demanding adults suffer is noble in theory—but exhausting in practice.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
Nearly everyone insisted adults claim the bed, calling the boyfriend’s cot-sleeping habit sweet but unsustainable.






A couple of voices suggested practical compromises while still backing the mom.



Others kept it light with relatable pain and petty-comeback energy.
![[Reddit User] − NTA. Kids can sleep anywhere and be ready to go the next day. I sleep on a lumpy mattress and I’m feeling it the next day for...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762499397038-1.webp)
![[Reddit User] − NTA. Adults always get the best sleeping arrangements. Kids should use the pull out. I’m an adult and to this day, when I vacation with my mother,...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762499398107-2.webp)

In the end, two hardworking adults dropping a fortune on one week of paradise shouldn’t wake up wrecked because preteen comfort trumps basic physics and back health. The boyfriend’s cot-sleeping devotion is admirable on solo trips, but dragging a paying partner into the same sacrifice crosses from selfless into unfair.
Who gets the bed when everyone’s paying and no one’s upgrading—parents or kids? Have you ever fought over vacation sleeping arrangements? Spill your resort horror stories (or genius hacks) in the comments.
