AITA for telling my BIL i won’t take care of his grandmother and if he left her with me i’d call adult protective services?

Imagine a bustling household, already humming with the care of one grandmother, suddenly thrown into chaos by an uninvited guest. A young adult, juggling online classes and family duties, faces a bold move by their sister and brother-in-law, who try to offload the BIL’s medically needy grandmother into their home without asking. When they refuse, the BIL drops her off anyway, sparking a fiery ultimatum: take her away or face Adult Protective Services.

The tension’s thicker than a foggy morning, with the OP standing firm against family pressure while grappling with guilt over an elderly woman’s plight. Reddit’s got their megaphones out, cheering and jeering in equal measure, turning this domestic standoff into a saga of boundaries and duty that’ll make you wonder where family obligation ends and personal limits begin.

‘AITA for telling my BIL i won’t take care of his grandmother and if he left her with me i’d call adult protective services?’

For a few years now my grandmother has been living with us (my dad, my older brother and sister, myself, and my little sister). My older sister’s husband (BIL) moved in 7 months ago. My older brother and i take care of my grandmother.

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Fortunately she’s healthy enough for a 60 year old woman and can take care of herself but, she couldn’t take care of her house anymore that’s why she moved in. Between my older brother and i (he works from home i take online classes) we take care of her and make sure she’s content throughout the day.

Lately, my BIL has been talking about his grandmother needing a place to stay. He commented how we take care of my grandma really well and she has better meals to eat whereas his doesn’t have the same treatment where she lives. My sister then offered to have her live here and share a room with my grandmother. She (without our permission) said my brother and i would take care of her.

I told both of them no i would not take care of her and my brother said the same and my dad backed us up. I told him as bad as i felt for her, i couldn’t take care of her because (as he said) she needed medications given to her specific times throughout the day, she has a very strict diet, and she needed someone to bathe her and change her.

A few days later he brought her over with a duffel bag, some blankets, and said she was kicked out of the place she was staying at and would only need to stay here a few days. I told him he’d need to get those days off for work because i would not be taking care of her. He walked away pissed off and i assume went to tell my sister because she came to me and said i could watch her a few days as a “trial run” and see if i could adjust to caring for her.

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I said both to my BIL and sister if he left her with me i’ll call Adult protective services because i won’t take care of her. My sister called me an a**hole and said she had no other family to go with and he doesn’t want to put her anywhere else. Am i the a**hole?. *************

Guys, i get it. Your parents/grandparents do not need help at 60+ but my grandma has been through a lot. She lost both her husband and daughter in the same year and my dad is honoring what my mom wanted by moving my grandma in with us. She had no one where she was living plus she lived far from us. For the time being she doesn’t have to be alone with no one to help her if she needs it.

This family’s playing a high-stakes game of boundary roulette, and the OP’s not here for it. Their sister and BIL’s attempt to dump a medically complex grandmother on them, without consent, is a masterclass in entitlement. The OP’s threat to call Adult Protective Services was a bold line in the sand, backed by their dad, but it’s stirred up accusations of heartlessness from their sister.

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This drama reflects a broader issue: caregiving responsibilities often fall on unwilling family members. A 2024 report from The Gerontologist notes that 60% of family caregivers feel pressured into roles they’re unprepared for, risking burnout. The BIL’s grandmother’s needs—medication schedules, strict diets, and personal care—require professional skills the OP and their brother lack.

Dr. Nancy Schlossberg, a caregiving expert, states, “Caregiving must be consensual and within one’s capacity to avoid harm to all parties” . The OP’s refusal protects their mental health and their grandmother’s care quality. Their sister’s “trial run” pitch ignores the gravity of untrained caregiving.

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The OP should hold firm, insisting the BIL and sister arrange professional care or a suitable facility. They could offer to help research options, showing empathy without taking on the burden. For others in similar spots, experts suggest clear, united family communication and exploring local eldercare resources to avoid such conflicts.

See what others had to share with OP:

Reddit swung in like a family meeting gone wild, dishing out support and a few raised eyebrows. From slamming the BIL’s audacity to questioning the sister’s overreach, here’s the crowd’s raw take:

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mythoughtsrrandom − NTA. Call adult protective services and why is your father letting this guy make decisions on who gets to move into his house? Into a room with **his** mother?

IllustratorNew8801 − NTA they can move out to a 2 bed place, one for them one for gran. Stand your ground. Also, if your own gran is 60 and healthy so you probably aren't really taking care of her, she just lives there and you keep her company so you're not experienced in adult care.

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aphrodora − NTA And I'm confident they're lying about her getting kicked out to manipulate you. Anyone who has to lie to get their way is 100% the a**hole.

[Reddit User] − NTA and you should call adult protective services now.

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Leahthevagabond − NTA - please stand firm! I’d tell them they have 24 hours to move her before you call Adult Protective Services. Also BIL and sister should get their own place. It sounds like BIL’s mother needs a medical professional to care for her.. I hope your dad will put his foot down and ask them to leave!!

Status-Ad-5041 − NTA as a former caregiver, she needs way more attention then what you and your brother are not only used to, but capable of (changing and bathing someone is huge and not for everyone). Like you said, she needs a specific diet and needs to be changed/bathed.

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You both are not licensed caregivers and it is a strain having to care for more than one person especially with those needs. You have every right to refuse and if they keep pushing tell them they can care for her if they are so worried. Please do not feel bad if you do have to call APS, they are literally abandoning her without anyone else's regard. Good luck.

SoAnonymously − INFO: Who owns this house? Where is your dad in all this? I mean, isn't there anyone setting boundaries for your grandmother? Does she have no say in having to suddenly share a bedroom with a stranger? Is this your dad's mother?

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dothepingu − INFO: How old are you? You definitely don't have to take care of anyone you don't want to take care of and depending on your age you should focus on moving out and getting away from this situation.. NTA

Cokezero1992 − NTA -. I feel bad for his mother, but thats HIS mother not your grandmother. Did he remove her from a care home? Can you ask here where she was? what was her previous arrangement?. BIL is trying to act like man of the house, and is being a d**che

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LA7421_ah − NTA and i might sound harsh but I hope your Dad kicks your sister and BIL out, not only for going against his wishes when he explicitly stated she could not live with y’all and be taken care of by you and your older brother, but for their attitude and assumption that they can do what they want, and that you would still take care of her as a “trial run”.

“My sister called me an a**hole and said she had no other family to go with and he doesn’t want to put her anywhere else”. 1. If she needs family to take her in, tell sister and BIL to get their own place and THEN they can dictate who lives with them.

I bet if they had their own place and it was only the 2 of them there that would have to take care of her, your sister would change her tune pretty fast about where to put her. 2. Y’all’s house isn’t your sister and BIL’s. Not their roof, not their soil, not their decision to make, and taking care of HIS grandmother is not YOUR problem.

These Redditors brought the heat, rallying behind the OP’s stand while poking at the family’s nerve. But do their fiery opinions capture the full picture, or are they just fueling the drama?

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This tale’s a stark reminder that family ties don’t mean automatic duty, especially when it comes to heavy caregiving. The OP’s stand against their BIL’s overstep was a gutsy move to protect their home’s harmony, but the guilt lingers like an uninvited guest. It’s a messy clash of compassion and boundaries that hits home for anyone juggling family expectations. Have you ever had to draw a hard line with relatives pushing too far? What would you do in this caregiving conundrum? Share your thoughts below!

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