AITA for refusing to speak to MIL and cancelling our wedding?

Planning a wedding should be a joyful time, but when one partner’s family harbors deep resentment, even the happiest milestone can feel poisoned. A 35-year-old woman and her 30-year-old fiancé have endured years of cold treatment from his mother (MIL), including exclusion, belittling comments, and outright admission that she simply doesn’t like her future daughter-in-law.

The situation reached a breaking point with deliberate misinformation spread by MIL, turning family events—including her son’s brother’s wedding and Christmas—into humiliating experiences filled with judgment and false rumors about the woman’s teenage son. Now the couple is seriously considering scrapping their planned wedding in favor of eloping, while the fiancé insists she confront MIL one final time before he cuts contact. She’s refusing—and wondering if that makes her the problem.

‘AITA for refusing to speak to MIL and cancelling our wedding?’

Years of hostility from MIL create constant tension.

I (f35) and fiancé (m30) are considering cancelling our wedding and eloping instead because of MIL MIL has never tried to have a positive relationship with me.

She makes sure I’m not included in conversations, belittles my achievements & talks down to me. Things escalated when I was planning fiancés 30th.

MIL fought me on every detail and accused me of not knowing my fiancé at all. (I planned a golf weekend away for him and his family) he loves golf.

Escalation during fiancé’s 30th birthday and a direct confrontation.

Fiancé confronted MIL and asked why she doesn’t like me? MIL admitted she doesn’t like me. Doesn’t like my partner driving me to his family events, didn’t like it took...

Fiancé receives calls and texts from MIL daily. If he doesn’t respond, she blames me.. Fiancé told her if she doesn’t stop this behaviour toward me he will no longer...

Rumors and deliberate humiliation spread through the extended family.

I agreed to meet with MIL to smooth things over and try to move forward. MIL never took me up on it. But things seemed ok for a time.. Fast...

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Five minutes to 2pm fiancé receives call from MIL saying the family photo shoot is in 5 minutes. We hadn’t been told of a family photo shoot? MIL demands we...

We frantically get ready and arrive at the house where the wedding was. There was never a photo shoot planned. MIL comes out in her pjs and tries to hand...

MIL snaps at me asking where my son is. He was never coming. He’s at the hotel. MIL continues stating everyone thought he would be there. I respond he was...

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She has been told multiple times he wasn't coming. The ceremony is over & I started to have guests come up to me asking where my son is. I don’t...

Looks of disgust are thrown at me. My new friends stopped talking to me. I realised these people were being told my son was at the hotel but not telling...

Christmas Day at MIL house. Her family scurry away from me on arrival, refusing to hug or greet me. One man, whom I had met once 2 years ago, aggressively...

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(Son was at fathers place this year). The rumour has continued and now not only does the MIL hate me, so do her family.

I made up an excuse to announce the fact my son was a teenager whom just finished his first year of high school at the top of his class. Everyones...

Now fiancé wants to cancel wedding and elope because of MIL. Fiancé is demanding I speak with MIL one last time in order for him to cut her off.. AITA...

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When a future mother-in-law openly admits dislike and actively works to undermine and isolate her son’s partner, it creates an unsustainable dynamic for any healthy marriage. The fiancé has already confronted his mother multiple times, set boundaries, and threatened no-contact—yet the behavior has only worsened, including spreading damaging rumors that turned family celebrations into public shaming sessions. This isn’t mere disapproval; it’s sustained emotional sabotage.

What makes the situation more complicated is the fiancé’s current demand: he wants his fiancée to confront MIL one last time so he can feel justified in cutting her off. While understandable on an emotional level (many people crave final closure or want to avoid being seen as the “bad guy”), it places an unfair burden on the woman who has already endured years of hostility. She has nothing left to prove, and forcing her into another confrontation risks further humiliation without any realistic chance of change.

Eloping, or at minimum drastically scaling down the wedding to exclude toxic family members, protects the couple’s joy and mental health. Marriage is about building a new family unit—not appeasing people who refuse to accept it. The fiancé’s support is encouraging, but true partnership means he handles his family’s consequences himself, without requiring his future wife to act as his emotional shield.

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Check out how the community responded:

Most readers strongly encourage the couple to elope or drastically reduce the wedding guest list, praising the fiancé’s support while criticizing his need for one final confrontation.

archetyping101 − I'd reword this. You're still getting married and possibly skipping the wedding and reception.   NTA. But is this what you want?

Since your fiance backs you, why can't you have a wedding (IF that's what you two want) and just not invite his mom and other people?

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You two still deserve to be celebrated and I sure AF wouldn't give up a day I wanted because of her. She hates you. Your partner needs to get a...

Either he lays down the law and cuts them out or I suggest breaking up. My partner and I went to counseling over this and you're either a team or...

Even if he maintained a relationship and they kept shitting on you, he's letting you down. The only way he could have his family in his life AND you is...

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For example, sitting his mom down and saying "hey I know you don't like (your name - let's say it's Beth). Beth isn't going anywhere. I love Beth. You don't...

You will not trash talk, belittle, disrespect or do anything to Beth. If you ever talk disrespectfully or rudely to Beth or about Beth, you will not have me in...

So if you decide hating her is more important than having me in your life, that's your decision and you will face the consequence of that because I won't tolerate...

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This is coming from me. Do not blame Beth for anything. I am telling you what I will not tolerate about how you treat the person I love."

This way she knows the boundary. It's not controlling her, it's telling her that her actions and choices will result in consequences.

Dee_Ree − By way of background, fiancé has previously spoken with MIL and tried to set clear boundaries and said if this doesn’t improve, he will no longer have a...

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It has only gotten worse. Now fiancé wants me to sit down with MIL and confront her behaviour before he can cut her off. I don’t want to sit with...

The wedding that is planned for three months time consists of 90% her side of the family that don’t like me. I know I will be blamed for MIL not...

Significant_Break149 − NTA ELOPE! It will be so fun! Use the funds to go somewhere magical, get the dress off your dreams (if that’s important to you),

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take the best photos, eat the best food, have the time of your life. If they already hate you, you’ve got nothing to lose! Doooo ittttt.

pray21702 − He is wanting you to be his meat shield so mommy will hate you and not him. I would worry more about some pre-marital counseling because he can’t...

PD_31 − NTA. At least your fiance is on your side. Elope, get married and live well.

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A smaller group focuses on the fiancé’s responsibility, warning that he may be using the confrontation as an emotional crutch.

Bonnm42 − Fiancé says he needs that to happen. No,he REALLY doesn’t. The only thing he needs to do, is stop using this as an out and confront his Mother....

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Fearless_Ad1685 − NTA. But don't cancel the wedding if a wedding is what you and your fiance want. If you do have a wedding, only invite the people that support...

Don't invite anyone who doesn't support both of you. If that means, no MIL, she'll just have to live with the consequences of her actions

A couple of comments add enthusiastic support for eloping and light-hearted encouragement to reclaim the joy.

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gotogodot − Absolutely agree with fiancé. Elope. Use the money for an amazing honeymoon and don't tell MIL where you're going. NTA.

Icy_Department_1423 − NTA. Elope and be happy.

Stranger0nReddit − NTA, but why cancel the wedding? If you want a wedding, you should have a wedding. That doesn't mean you need to include your hateful MIL or anyone...

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This painful saga shows how unchecked in-law hostility can overshadow what should be one of life’s happiest chapters. The couple has every right to prioritize their peace and happiness—whether that means eloping, a small private ceremony, or a wedding free of toxic guests. The real question is whether the fiancé can fully own his family boundaries without leaning on his partner to absorb more pain.

Have you ever dealt with a toxic in-law who actively tried to sabotage your relationship? Would you elope in this situation, or try to salvage a wedding without the hostile side of the family? How much confrontation is fair to expect from a partner before cutting contact? Share your thoughts below.

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