WIBTA If We Said Our SIL’s Boyfriend Can’t Come To Our Home Because He Keeps Ignoring Boundaries With Our Baby?

How do you protect your child when someone keeps crossing the line, even if they don’t mean harm? A couple faced this challenge when their sister-in-law’s teenage boyfriend wouldn’t stop touching their baby. Despite his autism, his actions left guests uneasy and disrupted family events.

The parents value inclusion and understand special needs deeply. Yet, repeated boundary violations—like waking a napping infant or taking the baby from others—created tension. At their toddler’s birthday party, strangers felt creeped out. Now, they wonder if banning him from their home makes them the villains. This situation tests compassion against parental instinct. Where should the line be drawn?

‘WIBTA If We Said Our SIL’s Boyfriend Can’t Come To Our Home Because He Keeps Ignoring Boundaries With Our Baby?’

The couple introduces their family dynamic and the boyfriend’s constant presence.

Okay a little backstory is needed here because I know the title is…..oof. There’s just quite literally no other way to phrase it. My (32F) husband (34M) is a Special...

This profession was inspired by his much younger half-sister who has Autism. We have a large, close family who spends a lot of time together. My sister in law (16f)...

For the last 6 months, he has been present at every family dinner, event, etc. I want to make it VERY VERY clear, he’s a nice kid. He’s COMPLETELY harmless,...

The boyfriend’s fixation on the baby becomes a recurring problem.

Here comes the “BUT”…This kid makes everyone very uncomfortable. He’s obsessed with holding our 10 month old, and we have had to ask many many times that he stops taking...

He also frequently goes into where our baby is napping and wakes him up to hold him. At my in-laws, it is what it is. We try to set boundaries,...

An uninvited appearance escalates the issue at the couple’s home.

Yesterday we threw a birthday party for our toddler. Unexpectedly, my SILs boyfriend came as a +1. None of our friends and other family have ever met him, and didn’t...

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The long and the short of it is, multiple people expressed to us that he made them uncomfortable, and asked me and my husband who he was.

He was asking strangers questions with no filter, taking my baby from friends and family to hold him, and once again walking the baby up in his room multiple times....

Everyone was kind to him, and once word went around he had Autism, his behavior made a lot more sense to the guests. I just hate the way it feels...

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The couple considers a firm boundary and clarifies their stance.

Moving forward, would we be huge assholes if we ask my in laws that he not come as a +1 to events WE throw at OUR home? We’re frustrated with...

ETA: my baby clearly doesn’t like being held by this guy. He leans away. We take him back the moment we see he has been passed to the BF ALSO:...

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I used the word “uncomfortable” because I wanted to make it clear I wasn’t making any accusations, and I’m trying to be gentle, kind and fair-

but the truth is other guests were really creeped out by his obsession with the baby. Maybe uncomfortable was the wrong choice of words in the OP to describe the...

The conflict centers on balancing empathy for autism with the non-negotiable duty to protect a child. The boyfriend’s fixation on the baby—touching, photographing, and waking him—violates clear parental boundaries. Guests felt uneasy, and the baby showed discomfort. The parents want control in their own home, but fear being seen as exclusionary.

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The OP and her husband show deep compassion, shaped by family experience with autism. Still, the boyfriend’s perseverative behavior signals a lack of supervision or training from his caregivers. The in-laws enable his presence without enforcing rules, shifting responsibility onto the hosts. Communication has failed: repeated requests go ignored, and the teen lacks tools to self-regulate in new settings.

Dr. Tony Attwood, a leading autism specialist, writes in The Complete Guide to Asperger’s Syndrome (2006): “Individuals with autism often need explicit, repeated instruction on social rules, especially in novel environments.” This applies directly—the boyfriend requires structured guidance from adults who know him. Without it, his actions escalate, harming both the child and his own social growth.

To resolve this, the couple should speak directly to the boyfriend’s parents or school specialist. Share specific incidents calmly and request a behavior plan: no baby access, no photos, supervised interaction only. At home events, enforce a “one warning” policy—any violation means immediate removal. Invite the boyfriend only to low-stakes gatherings with pre-set rules. The in-laws must respect that their home is not the couple’s. Clear, consistent boundaries protect everyone involved.

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See what others had to share with OP:

Many insisted the couple must prioritize their child’s safety and comfort, autism or not.

Commercial_Ear_3440 − Whether he had autism or not, constantly on at your child is not a boundary I would tolerate. . also no guarantee he is harmless. . NTA

parodytx − NTA. Your home, your rules. Be prepared for blowback and refusal of other family members to attend. Since they are 16, it is not likely to be a...

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lady-scorpio-45 − Trust your gut. He may very well be harmless but he won’t leave your kid alone. It’s not okay. NTA

Antique-Read5463 − Nta inlaws need to take responsibility or face the consequences that he can't go if they don't find a solution within your boundries

[Reddit User] − NTA- they are 16 years old, dating for only a few months, not married and your in-laws need to stop normalizing him coming to family events like...

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HelenGonne − NTA. You should have given him one warning on grabbing the baby without direct permission from one of the baby's parents, going in the baby's room without one...

and the next transgression after that should have been you marching him out the door. Lay down the law, but make it about behavior, not about him. "People who have...

"People who grab our baby without our permission are not invited to our home. " And then stick to those boundaries, hard and fast, with everyone.

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throwtome723 − You and your husband need to step up and physically remove your child from his arms. And flat out not allow him in your home. Autism or not,...

[Reddit User] − NTA, your home your rules. However, instead of making it your in-laws problem you and husband need to speak directly to SIL and the boyfriend. State your...

If you do, you leave. You do not come to our home/events unless WE invite you. You do not get to come just because SIL is invited. You do not...

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QueenofNighshade − You sense something in this guy that you don't like. It would be irresponsible for you to allow him around your children. NTA

angel9_writes − Being autistic doesn't mean we get to tread on boundaries and not respect people and especially when it comes to their children. If he will not respect your...

Rivvien − I'd want to keep anyone out of my home if they kept going into my baby's room and bugging them while they're sleeping, autism or no.

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If anyone, autism or no, can't follow rules in your home after being asked multiple times, esp those regarding your child, then I think its fair to not invite them....

But a baby woken up multiple times during their naps makes your life much harder because it throws off their sleep schedule.

If a non-autistic friend or relative kept going into your sleeping baby's room to wake them up, what would you do? If, after talking to them about it, your in-laws...

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Some urged teaching the boyfriend clear rules instead of exclusion.

TararaBoomDA − Perhaps just tell your in-laws that he is not to come to events at your home UNLESS HE IS EXPLICITLY INVITED. That way it's up to them to...

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GlitchiePixie − NTA. I would sit down with him and explain the situation without children / babies present. Making the boundaries clear, and, if he finds it helpful, write down...

If they are written down then you can have them up and point to them to remind him. Also, does he have permission to take all these photos of your...

His lack of boundaries could put your child at risk. Maybe also talk to the kid's parents to just make them aware too, as they might know how to better...

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I would also possibly pull back on having the baby at your in laws for now, explaining to them the reason. If you don't feel like you can put boundaries...

A few stressed involving professionals or the boyfriend’s family.

mbt13 − His family, his school or behavior specialist need to be informed. He is perseverating on your son and this behavior needs correction.

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He should know he is not allowed to dominate the baby and there need to be rules and consequences on how many times he holds the baby etc etc.

No one saying anything is a disservice to him. Now he has worked his way out of being invited to social situations cuz of his behavior.

ThePythiaofApollo − “It’s not his fault” that he doesn’t understand boundaries and is “creepy and rude” and makes people “uncomfortable”? Then his parents need to be notified that their son...

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This story reveals the tension between kindness and parental duty. The couple isn’t rejecting the boyfriend—they’re protecting their child from repeated intrusions. Autism explains behavior, but doesn’t erase the need for rules. Clear boundaries, backed by caregivers, could allow safe inclusion in the future.

Would you ban someone from your home for repeatedly waking your baby, even if they didn’t mean harm? Or would you work with their family to teach better boundaries first? When compassion and safety collide, which wins—and how do you enforce it without burning bridges?

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