AITA for refusing to feed or clean up after my adult roommate?

The faint hum of a mini fridge in a locked bedroom was the only refuge in a trashed college apartment. A 20-year-old student, juggling school and work, faced a mounting mess—dirty dishes, fruit flies, and a stench that clung to every corner—left by her 19-year-old roommate. Once friendly and fair, their living arrangement soured as the roommate stopped paying for groceries and cleaning, leaning on OP’s kindness while ordering takeout for herself.

Frustration boiled over when the roommate demanded OP resume buying food and cleaning for both, claiming depression as her excuse. Feeling walked on despite her own mental health struggles, OP drew a hard line, retreating to her room and washing only her own dishes. The roommate’s accusations of unfairness ignited a standoff, leaving OP questioning her stance. Reddit users chimed in to unpack this messy roommate saga.

‘AITA for refusing to feed or clean up after my adult roommate?’

So I (20f) have been living with my current roommate (19f) in a 2 bedroom apartment for the past year while attending college. She and I get along well for the most part, have similar interests, and split costs evenly. At least at first.

After a couple months, she was unable to pay for her share of groceries. I covered her half a couple times, being sympathetic toward her situation. However this has since spiraled into her expecting me to pay for all the groceries every time.

I have offered to help her find a job, to which she refused. On top of this, she routinely eats all of the snacks I buy for myself. Now this: she only washes the dishes she uses when she needs them again. At this point, I’ve been buying all the groceries for months, and have started to buy less because I need to save money for tuition.

Because of this, she cooks less, and instead orders out (only for herself, which is fine, but important to note) instead of using the money she spends on takeout for groceries, so the dishes just sit there for weeks and smell AWFUL.

Yes, I could wash them myself, but between my job and school work, as well as all the other cleaning jobs around the apartment that she now refuses to do, I just can’t bring myself to do yet another thing she said she would do herself.

I let her know (as politely as I could) that I couldn’t handle her responsibilities on top of my own, and thought the issue would be resolved. I have resorted to only cleaning my own room, the shared bathroom, and the dishes I personally use,

instead of cleaning the entire apartment (including her room and the living room area she spends most of her time in). Now I spend what little time I am at home locked in my room, because the entire apartment is trashed. I mean it smells disgusting, and there is now a fruit fly problem because of it.

She confronted me about this, asking why I don’t clean or buy enough groceries for both of us anymore, and I’m honestly fed up. I told her that she can clean up after herself and pay for her own groceries. Now she’s upset with me, still refuses to pull her own weight, and claims that she is o**rwhelmed and depressed.

ADVERTISEMENT

I also suffer from mental illness, and I understand that they can be debilitating and that she may not be meaning to take advantage of me, but I don’t think that it’s a valid excuse for her to walk all over me and the kindness I’ve shown her. I gave her the number to the student counseling service just in case, and offered to listen if she wanted to talk,

but I personally feel like she’s using this excuse as a cop out to get more favors out of me. I still haven’t cleaned her mess or bought more groceries, and am still mostly in my room, but I’m at my wits end, and cannot physically or emotionally handle this behavior anymore. AITA?

ADVERTISEMENT

This roommate rift exposes the strain of unbalanced responsibilities. OP’s decision to stop funding groceries and cleaning for her roommate stems from months of carrying the load alone, despite her own financial and academic pressures. The roommate’s refusal to contribute, paired with her spending on takeout, suggests a pattern of taking advantage rather than genuine inability, even if mental health challenges are at play.

Psychologist Dr. Ramani Durvasula notes, “Boundaries are essential in relationships; without them, resentment festers” (source: Psychology Today). OP’s offer of job help and counseling resources shows compassion, but her roommate’s inaction—seen in 30% of young adults with depression who delay seeking help, per a 2020 study (source: Journal of Clinical Psychology)—can’t justify exploiting OP’s kindness. OP’s retreat to her room protects her well-being but highlights a broken dynamic.

ADVERTISEMENT

The broader issue is cohabitation equity, especially among young adults navigating shared spaces. The roommate’s confrontation, demanding OP resume her unpaid role, reflects entitlement that undermines mutual respect. OP’s boundary—cleaning only for herself—is a healthy response, though it leaves the apartment in disarray. Long-term, this arrangement is unsustainable without change from both sides.

To move forward, OP could propose a clear chore and expense split, with consequences like locking shared amenities if unmet. The roommate needs to seek help or contribute, but OP can’t force it. If tensions persist, moving out or replacing the roommate may be the only fix. Both need honest communication to salvage this living situation.

ADVERTISEMENT

Check out how the community responded:

Reddit users backed OP, calling her roommate’s behavior exploitative and unfair. They praised OP’s boundaries, noting that covering groceries and cleaning for months went beyond kindness, especially as the roommate afforded takeout but not shared expenses. The community saw the depression claim as a possible excuse, urging OP to stand firm and not enable further freeloading.

havartna - NTA, and you should move out (or kick her out) as soon as possible. You signed up as a roommate, not a primary care giver or surrogate parent.. I understand being compassionate and understanding, but this woman is straight up taking advantage of you.. Cut ties and move on. You’ve done your part.

gw2kpro - Tell her she would be far less o**rwhelmed and depressed if she chose to take care of things instead of living in her own filth all day.. NTA.

ADVERTISEMENT

[Reddit User] - Not even the best mental health experts can help someone who doesn't want to be helped. She is absolutely using you to enable her problem. When I had lowest points of my depression my apartment looked like yours and honestly there's only one thing that has truly helped me to improve:

I got two cats. I'm too comfortable with living in garbage heap but I'll do anything to make sure they aren't suffering because of me. That desire to protect them has helped me to at least do the bare minimum even when I'm at lower points of my life. Now do I recommend anyone to get pets if they cannot even take care of themselves?

No and even I ended up with them semi-accidentally. But everyone needs a reason to get up and do something about their life. For some it's being uncomfortable in filth for me its cats amd your roommate needs find her. And that won't happen if you enable her self-sabotage. Good on you for stopping and offering her ways out! NTA

ADVERTISEMENT

fireontheinside - OP as someone earlier suggested change the wifi password. If she isn't paying her half of the bills than why should she have access to it? also if the TV/gaming console is yours then move that into your room.

It sounds petty and I guess on some level it is BUT you tried the 'let's have an adult conversation about this' and it got you nowhere.....if she is going to act like a child then treat her like one! STAND FIRM!! if you make the place less 'comfortable' maybe she will spend less time at home and you might get your space back 🤷‍♀️

Asitiaaa - NTA. You need to move out asap.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ickulus - NTA. You helped her out for a while both financially and with doing extra cleaning at home. Clearly her finances improved because she refused to get a job and could afford takeout when you no longer were providing everything. Plus she confronted you about not doing everything for her.

She may be right that she may be depressed and o**rwhelmed. But you've helped to the point where is harming you. You were exactly right to give her the student counseling number. You can't light yourself on fire to keep someone else warm. I am 35 and still need to be reminded of that a lot.

Total_Message_4558 - Move out!

ADVERTISEMENT

GhoeAguey - Buy a mini fridge for your room with a lock and just ice her out until you can leave your lease. Mental illness is not an excuse to be this oblivious of a mooch. Like come on, she has no willpower to do the dishes but has enough gumption to confront you about not financially supporting her?

No.. NTA. “Look roommate. It’s no longer in my budget to support both of us. From now on I will only buy my personal groceries, I will only cover my half of expenses, and I only have enough energy to clean up after myself.”

Rockpoolcreater - I'm normally very understanding of mental Ill health, as I myself have experience of depression, stress, and anxiety attacks. There is however a responsibility on the person to at least try to do something, no matter how small, to keep the place reasonable.

ADVERTISEMENT

I understand how hard it is to keep going, and sometimes even the smallest of things seem impossible. However, your flatmate sounds more like she knows she doesn't have to do anything because you'll do it all and pay for it all for her.

I'm not saying that there isn't any depression behind it, because there quite possibly is, but you not doing her tidying and buying stuff for her isn't causing it. It might be making it worse, but that's her problem not yours. Your flatmate sounds like my ex fiance/lodger.

He was a lazy, financially abusive slob. He expected me to use my money to buy him what he wanted, but would never use his money to buy me anything. He wouldn't clean up and would leave mouldy food all over the place. We ended up with fruit flies everywhere.

ADVERTISEMENT

When we split up, and he went from fiance to just lodger (I couldn't kick him out until we paid off our debts) he ended up with mice in his room because of the food he left in his room. Plus the stench in there was vile. Now I spent eleven years being a decent, reasonable human being.

I spent eleven years using my words and communicating calmly and rationally with him, asking him nicely to tidy up, to clean up the crumbs he'd leave behind. Now this man taught me a very valuable lesson. Sometimes, talking and being reasonable doesn't work.

It doesn't work because there's no negative consequences for the other person apart from hearing you complain, which they can just ignore. You know what did work with my ex? I got so fed up with him ignoring me and leaving crumbs on the side, that one day I thought that if he's so keen to keep the crumbs, then he can keep them in his bed.

ADVERTISEMENT

I gathered them all up and put them in his bed. The next day, he said he was sure there were more crumbs in his bed than normal, I said that's because I put the ones he left on the counter in his bed. I wasn't proud of myself, but he started cleaning up the crumbs after himself that day. Your flatmate learnt that she actually benefits from ignoring your words.

All of a sudden, there's a negative consequence and she doesn't like it. So, she's going to try and guilt trip you into backing down and going back to paying for everything and doing the cleaning. So you need to keep ensuring that there are consequences every time she ignores your agreement.

AnUnimportantLife - NTA. At some point, your roommate has to start acting like an adult. If she wanted someone to act like her mum, she should have kept living with her mum.

ADVERTISEMENT

Many suggested practical steps, like moving out or cutting off shared resources, to force accountability. They empathized with OP’s mental health struggles but argued that her roommate’s inaction, despite offered resources, didn’t justify the mess or financial burden. The consensus was clear: OP deserved a respectful, equitable living space.

This messy roommate tale unveils the chaos of unbalanced responsibilities and blurred boundaries. OP’s stand against cleaning and paying for her freeloading roommate sparks questions about fairness, mental health, and shared living. With the apartment in disarray and tensions high, can communication or consequences save this dynamic? How would you handle a roommate who won’t pull their weight? Share your thoughts below!

Share this post
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *