AITA for telling my brother’s ex that I don’t love her child(my niece)?

A family trip to Turkey turned into a painful confrontation when a woman invited only one of her two nieces, leading to accusations of favoritism and unequal love. The poster has always been close to 14-year-old Freya, who lived nearby and spent time with the family daily, while 15-year-old Olivia grew up across the country with her mother and was seen only once a year.

When Olivia’s mother overheard the invitation extended to Freya and asked if Olivia could join too, the poster refused, stating she didn’t know Olivia well enough to feel comfortable taking her on an international trip. What makes the story more complicated is the blunt admission that followed: the poster told the mother she didn’t love Olivia, blaming the years of distance created by the mother’s choices and limited contact.

‘AITA for telling my brother’s ex that I don’t love her child(my niece)?’

Two half-sisters with very different family connections set the stage for an uneven relationship with their aunt.

My brother has 2 daughters. The older daughter is 15(Olivia) and the younger one is 14(Freya) Olivia's mom chose to live in another city across the country.

We could only see her about once a year. Freya however lived next to us and we saw her everyday therefore we are very close. Recently Olivia and her mom...

Plans for an exciting international trip highlight the closeness with one niece while excluding the other.

I am planning a trip to turkey and I asked Freya's mom if I could take her with me because she always wanted to go to Istanbul and my kids...

Olivia's mom was there and aaked me if I'm going to take Olivia as well. I said that no I don't know her and I don't feel comfortable with doing...

A demand for equal treatment leads to harsh honesty that leaves everyone upset.

She said that they are both my nieces and I should love and treat them equally. I told her that I don't love her child and this is her fault,...

Now she needs to accept that we don't love her child She thinks I'm an a__hole and Olivia is very upset because she wants to come with us.

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This situation exposes the raw reality of blended families and the lasting impact of parental decisions on extended relationships. The poster’s closer bond with Freya stems directly from consistent presence, while limited contact with Olivia created emotional distance that time alone hasn’t yet bridged. Refusing to take a lesser-known teenager on an expensive overseas trip is reasonable—international travel involves significant responsibility, cost, and trust that naturally develops through shared experiences.

Criticism centers on the delivery: stating outright “I don’t love her child” in a confrontational moment was unnecessarily wounding, especially since Olivia is old enough to understand and feel the rejection personally. A softer boundary—emphasizing unfamiliarity rather than absence of love—could have protected feelings while holding the same line. Opposing views argue that blood ties should inspire extra effort to include Olivia now that proximity allows it, and that blaming the mother in front of others risks alienating the niece further.

Broader social perspective reveals a common tension: love cannot be mandated equally across relatives, yet fairness in treatment matters, particularly for minors navigating family complexities. While no one owes equal affection, opportunities to build new connections—like smaller local outings—could help heal the gap without forcing uncomfortable commitments like a major trip.

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Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Several users defended the poster, stressing that closeness requires time and presence, not just blood relation.

ThisWillAgeWell − I'm going to get downvoted for this, but NTA. You didn't say you hated or even disliked Olivia.

You said *you didn't love her,* which is a fact, and the reason is not that Olivia is inherently unlovable, but because you barely know her. She's almost a stranger...

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I don't love people I don't know, no matter how closely they are related to me. I'm actually in a similar position to you. I have lots of nieces and...

One of my brothers has three children (all now grown up) by three different women. I'll call them A, B, and C. I hardly ever saw A and B when...

As a result, I'm much closer to C than I am to A and B, and C did a lot to help me after I became disabled. I saw A...

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and I'll bet they couldn't pick me out of a police lineup. I too am thinking of going on an overseas trip in the next couple of years, and I've...

It's possible A and B would be upset if they found out. *But I don't know them. * They're almost strangers to me. And I don't want to go on...

She said they are both my nieces and I should love and treat them equally. * "Love them equally" is ridiculous.

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Love is a feeling; you can't help who you love, only how you show it. "Treat them equally" is an argument with slightly more merit, especially if the children are...

But Olivia is 15, and I'd argue that is old enough to understand that you really can't expect a person to spend a large amount of money on you when...

sturtze − ESH Olivia’s mom should realize the relationship dynamics and not push for inclusion on the trip. However, you could have handled that about 1000x better.

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ggcc789 − ESH. Olivia's mom can ask, but shouldn't demand. Since your answer is "No," her focus should be on helping Olivia manage her feelings about not going on the...

How does she imagine that will end well? However, you could have been nicer and smarter about this, and still have been 100% honest. How about "Ofc Olivia is my...

However, she's grown up seeing us once a year, so we don't know Olivia well, and she also doesn't really know us. I wouldn't be comfortable taking her on a...

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and I doubt she'd be comfortable either once the initial excitement wears off. When she gets homesick or tired or lonely, I wouldn't be able to focus just on her...

and frankly this is my vacation, too. Maybe in a few years, when we've gotten to know each other better, things will be different. "

[Reddit User] − YTA for planning the trip in front of people who weren’t invited.

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Others felt everyone mishandled the situation, suggesting gentler wording while acknowledging the mother’s overreach.

Schnucksworld − NTA. She sounds entitled as f__k.

HealthyApartment8585 − Umm did you say that in front of Olivia? Cause then Y T A. If not, then you’re good.

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atterysquash − INFO: so - reading between the lines: * These two daughters are one year apart in age. * They have different mothers.

The mother of the older one moved very far away is it fair to assume that your brother either broke up with the mother of his newly-born first daughter, then...

or was cheating on Olivia's mother with Freya's mother? If that's the case, then absolutely Y T A - it sounds like she had excellent reasons for leaving and for...

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and you should have been working extra hard to build that trust over the last fifteen years, and you \*really\* should make the effort to bond with your niece now...

A few comments added critical or thoughtful angles, questioning context and long-term family effort.

IntelligentSpare687 − Could’ve left it at the “I don’t know her” in my opinion. If you don’t know her, it’s hard to say you do love or not love her.

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She is your niece, you should love her even in the absence and distance. Don’t let the anger for her mother impact your opinion of the daughter.

Disastrous_Cress_701 − NTA. Harsh yes. But only because you were pushed. OP said no and that she wasn't comfortable taking older niece first, which is entirely understandable.

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If I don't know someone well, no matter their age, I don't want to be responsible for them in another country. OP doesn't know if the kid will respect rules,...

Taking a child overseas and being responsible for them is a lot of work, when they're practically an adult and the same size as you it can be even harder...

you can't even pick them up like a screaming toddler to get them on the plane. Then the mother pushed with a 'you have to love and treat them the...

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First of all life doesn't work like that, and second of all why does she have to love someone she doesn't know? Everyone on here says blood doesn't make family...

but she *must* love her niece that she is just now, getting to know because they're related? The math doesn't math. And people picking on her about not wanting to...

I'm not wanting to spend what could be in the $5000+, depending on flights accommodation etc, on someone I barely know either, relative or not.

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[Reddit User] − You’re kind of an a__hole

Ultimately, the conflict reveals how past separations create uneven family bonds that can’t be instantly equalized, though blunt honesty about lacking love deepened the hurt for a teenage girl already adjusting to a new city. Both sides could benefit from focusing on gradual relationship-building rather than demanding immediate parity.

Would you have phrased the refusal differently to spare feelings while keeping the boundary? How much effort should extended family make to close gaps caused by parental choices years ago?

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