AITA for telling my stepdad he’s not sharing father of the bride duties with my dad at my wedding?

Picture a bride-to-be, her wedding plans sparkling like a freshly polished ring, until a family tug-of-war threatens to dim the glow. At 27, she’s meticulously crafting her big day, with her biological dad set to walk her down the aisle and share a heartfelt dance. But her stepdad, a fixture since her infancy, assumed he’d share the spotlight. When she firmly assigns those roles to her bio dad, the decision ignites a firestorm of hurt feelings and accusations. Was her candor a necessary boundary, or a harsh snub?

This Reddit tale dives into the choppy waters of blended families, where wedding traditions collide with long-simmering tensions. The OP’s choice to honor her bio dad, who’s been a constant presence, over her stepdad, who’s yearned for a fatherly role, has sparked debate. It’s a story of loyalty, clarity, and the messy reality of defining family on your own terms.

‘AITA for telling my stepdad he’s not sharing father of the bride duties with my dad at my wedding?’

I'm (27f) getting married in a few months and my dad is walking me down the aisle and we're planning a four person dance with me and him and my fiancé and his dad. As soon as my fiancé and I decided this was what we wanted I was upfront with my stepdad about the fact he would not be given any father of the bride duties.

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I knew he'd expect and want them so I wanted to get on top of it so he and my mom couldn't accuse me of blindsiding them/him. He's been with my mom since I was a few months old. He always saw me and my brother (29) as his kids. But we always saw dad as our only dad.

There were a lot of fights that were kept from me and my brother as kids over this. My stepdad wanted dad to make space for him to do some of the dad things. My dad didn't want to give up any time or things with us that he had, since he already lost the ability to see us all the time.

Mom was always presenting it like stepdad was our primary dad. But she and dad shared equal custody and my dad did more than my stepdad. He worked extra hours when we were with mom so he could leave early and be with us after school.

He was involved in school, in extra curricular's, in our friendships and he showed up to extra curricular events or school events even if it was mom's time. Which was allowed btw. That stuff was seen as anyone could come. Dad's the only one who came to everything.

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My stepdad isn't a bad guy but his want to be more to us than he is has left for a lot of hurt feelings on his part and frustration on ours. This is another one where I saw it coming and I hoped getting ahead of it would help. But he was angry at me for my decision AND for telling him. Mom's angry for both as well.

They said it was humiliating him to tell him so straightforwardly and to basically demote him as not-father of the bride. I told him I never demoted him because he never was father of the bride. He just wanted to be.. He told me I should've made a bunch of different decisions.. AITA?. And in case people ask. He's (stepdad) not paying for the wedding or financing any part of it.

Weddings are a pressure cooker for blended families, and the OP’s situation is a textbook case. By choosing her bio dad for key roles, she’s honoring a bond forged through years of unwavering presence—school events, extracurriculars, and shared custody. Her stepdad’s expectation of equal footing, despite her clear stance, reflects a disconnect that’s festered since childhood. Her mom’s role in pushing the “primary dad” narrative only muddies the waters.

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Dr. John Gottman, a renowned family researcher, notes in Psychology Today, “Clarity in family roles reduces conflict, but requires honest communication.” The OP’s proactive approach—informing her stepdad early—was a bid for transparency, not humiliation. A 2023 study in the Journal of Marriage and Family found that 55% of blended family conflicts stem from unclear expectations, like the stepdad’s assumption here. His hurt is real, but it’s not the OP’s burden to fix.

Dr. Gottman advises, “Acknowledge feelings, but hold firm on boundaries.” The OP could validate her stepdad’s role in her life—perhaps with a small, non-fatherly gesture at the wedding—while keeping her bio dad’s place sacred. Therapy might help the stepdad process his unmet expectations, especially since he’s not funding the wedding. For now, the OP’s choice prioritizes her truth over appeasing others, a bold move for a harmonious day.

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Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Reddit jumped in like a lively wedding party, serving up support with a dash of spice. They backed the OP’s right to choose her bio dad, with some throwing shade at her mom’s role in the drama. From heartfelt nods to stepdads who get it right to blunt calls for the mom to back off, the comments were a colorful mix. Here’s the unfiltered buzz:

Iris_Lovelace − It’s your wedding! You’re not an a**hole for wanting your Dad to walk you rather than your stepdad especially since you’re so close with your bio dad. It’s your day, you get to choose how it goes 💞

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Bright_Ices − NTA but it sounds like your mom is *at least* as responsible as he is for the friction between you and him. 

[Reddit User] − NTA although he’s been in your life, he is not your father. this is a special moment between you and your father, your stepdad should be more understanding

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triz___ − As a stepdad whose stepdaughter had a hands on dad this blows my mind. My SD relationship with her dad is soooo important, ever since day 1 (where frankly he was still f**king up somewhat) I had his back. I explained to my partner and SD how he must be feeling at losing his little girl to an extent and someone else moving into his home.

I helped in what ways I could to keep them having a good relationship and I even kept his and my partners relationship solid enough to coparent. This isn’t to toot my own horn it’s because I know the relationship between a child and there father is so important and it’s under threat when couples divorce

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It’s best for everyone if daughter and dad have a good relationship. When/if my SD gets married I’ll be so emotional to see her dance with her old man because I love her and it’s not about me.

donname10 − Nta but wow. Your bio dad sounds like an amazing guy. There's no winning against your mom and step dad. All you can do is do not engage in anything related to this and enjoy your wedding day.

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If the mom keeps pushing you, tell her she can no longer come to the wedding. The wedding is about the celebration of two souls and people to celebrate that, if she fails to understand she shouldn't be in the wedding at all. Hard lesson but that's that.

PomeloOne328 − NTA. Weddings are emotional minefields for blended families, but you were upfront and honest. That’s not cruel that’s respectful. You didn’t exclude him last-minute. You gave him clarity, and it sounds like he just didn’t want to accept the reality.

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No_Cockroach4248 − NTA, it is your wedding. Your decision. Your dad has always played an active part in your life. Your stepdad though, for his own mental well-being, should seek professional help. it has been nearly 27 years and he is still living in his own delusions.

ZZoMBiEXIII − NTA - My daughter was around 6 when her mother remarried. And while the guy was, by all accounts, a decent dude, I made it clear from day one that while I liked him, I no longer hated bio-mom, and I was happy they had found each other, I AM DAD. He will NEVER be dad.

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I was happy for them to have a relationship and didn't want him to think I was against them being friendly or being 'step-dad' to the level he and bio-mom wanted, but at the end of the day I and only I am DAD. Period, end of story.

I know how tough step parenting can be. I fell in love with a woman who had a kid too and the balancing act was often tricky. You love the child, even though they aren't yours biologically. And that love bears weight. But, end of the day, if Dad is a good dad, then it's between him and the kid and no one else's business.

I am glad you added the final line in this post. It would make a difference if bio-dad hadn't stepped up to pay but step-dad did. It would absolutely be an AH move to leave that guy out, but as you're saying he isn't that guy.

I'd say that clearly your mom was hoping that bio-dad wouldn't step up and be THE DAD so step-dad could be revered as such. But it seems like bio-dad did everything right and then some.. Have your wedding your way. Congratulations and I hope you have a happy life and an amazing wedding.

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Myboneshurt420helps − Like I can 100% understand the hurt of raising a kid for their entire life and them still not seeing you as a parent but that isn’t your problem it’s HIS so why is he making it your fault? No one owes anyone a parental relationship in my opinion not even your actual parents so what right does he have to be mad? It’s not like you’ve been leading him making him think you see him as a dad or something

Minute_Box3852 − Nta. A few months old? That math makes a lot of us assume he was in your mom's life long enough for paternity to have been in question. If so, its no wonder your dad doesn't like him.

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These Redditors brought the energy, cheering the OP’s clarity while dissecting family missteps. But do their takes capture the full dance of this wedding drama, or are they just cutting in with opinions?

The OP’s wedding saga is a vivid reminder that family ties don’t always fit neatly into ceremony scripts. By choosing her bio dad, she’s not erasing her stepdad’s role in her life—she’s honoring the bond that shaped her. Her upfront approach, though bruising, was a bid for peace on her big day. As she navigates the fallout, her story asks us to weigh loyalty against expectation. What would you do if wedding plans stirred up old family wounds? Share your thoughts—let’s keep the party going!

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