AITAH for banning neighbor kids from my house after repeatedly leaving the door open allowing my dog to escape?

A frustrated parent finally put his foot down and banned his son’s playmates from the house after they repeatedly left doors open, allowing the family dog to bolt out—four times and counting. With a young, energetic pup still in training and a recent neighbor dog gone missing for days, the latest escape pushed him over the edge.

He explained the rule clearly multiple times, but the kids didn’t listen. Now relatives and commenters are debating if he went too far protecting his furry family member.

‘AITAH for banning neighbor kids from my house after repeatedly leaving the door open allowing my dog to escape?’

The issue stems from simple house rules the kids just won’t follow:

My son has friends that come over all the time. I have reminded these kids to make sure they shut the doors so my dog doesn't get out.

My dog has gotten out four times now because of these kids leaving the door open and it's always been difficult to get her back in. She's still young and...

She's an active dog and has not done well with recall). Just recently a neighbor's dog went missing because it got scared of fireworks and took off.

Unfortunately the dog has not been found 10 days later. Last night the kids came over and my dog got out again and it took awhile to get her back....

I explained that I have told them multiple times to shut the door when they come in and they continue to not do so and I am not going to...

Pet safety trumps playdates every time—repeatedly ignoring a clear, simple rule that endangers an animal shows disregard for house rules and consequences. Four escapes is three too many; most owners would tighten access sooner.

Kids forget, sure, but after reminders, responsibility shifts. Banning them protects the dog without permanent drama—play can happen outside or at their homes.

Talking to parents could smooth things, framing it as “until they’re better about doors.” No overreaction here; fear from the neighbor’s loss is valid. Prioritizing pet welfare models good boundaries for your son too.

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Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Overwhelming NTA, with strong support for prioritizing the dog’s safety and frustration at careless kids.

Many emphasized consequences and pet priority:

rasalscan − NTA. Actions have consequences and you shouldn't lose you dog over their inattention.

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FlirtyHoneybun − Not the a__hole at all. Look, I get that kids forget things, but when it comes to pet safety, there's no room for "oops. " I've had to...

After the third time explaining why it matters, I started making him practice opening and closing it properly. If they can't respect something that basic in your home, they don't...

AcanthocephalaOne285 − NTA I'd have done the same thing. They aren't listening, and now you need to act. Honestly, I'm surprised that after 4 escapes, you still have a dog.

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BeachinLife1 − NTA. If they can't do one simple thing (do they not have doors at home? ) and shut the damn door, then they can't come back. It's that...

Specific_Design9383 − Protect your dog. No excuse for the kids to not listen or show consideration.

Specific-Morning-985 − NTA. How is this even a debate? Your house, your rules and your dog's well being takes priority over those stupid ass kids.

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SEYMOURASSES66 − Nope not the a__hole. If they can’t obey the rules they can’t be in the house.

I-Really-Hate-Fish − NTA. If they're old enough to visit people's houses, they're old enough to understand how doors work.

Some suggested involving parents or shifting responsibility:

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Allonsydr1 − NTA. But I think you need to have a discussion with their parents about their children’s carelessness and inability to follow a very basic direction and explain to...

[Reddit User] − NTA, the only thing I would do differently is make your child the responsible party. You can’t have your friends over if you keep letting the dog...

heyitsta12 − Info: you said the kids are coming over to play with your son? ? Why haven’t you talked to him about this more since it’s his house and...

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When a simple rule keeps getting ignored and endangers a beloved pet, drawing a hard line isn’t overreacting—it’s responsible ownership. The neighbor’s missing dog adds real fear factor.

Community backs the ban fully. Would you let play resume outside, or talk to parents first? And how many chances before “no more visits”?

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