Imagine offering your struggling aunt and uncle a lifeline by letting them rent your fixer-upper home, only for the conversation to explode when you ask for market value, $105,000, upon selling it.
That’s the raw deal a 31-year-old Redditor (F), a psychologist, faced after buying her house for $79,000 in 2020, investing $10,000 in renovations, and watching its value soar to $110,000 by 2022 amid a housing boom.
Her uncle’s liver disease and poor financial choices left them in debt, and while she gave them priority as renters at $800/month, her family’s now labeling her “greedy,” her dad’s pulling wedding funding, and texts fly calling her “n**ty.”
An update reveals the aunt and uncle are actually her parents, settling at $97,500 after manipulative family pressure. Was she wrong to hold firm on a fair price, or is family loyalty worth the hit?
This Reddit tale is a tangled web of real estate reality, family manipulation, and financial boundaries.
The Redditor’s stand for market value has fractured her support system, but with her parents’ history of denial and debt, is she the villain or the voice of reason?



Selling a home to family should be straightforward, but emotions often muddy the math. The Redditor, who snagged her house at a discount from a kind teacher and poured $10,000 into upgrades, offered it to her cash-strapped parents at a negotiated $105,000, well below the $110,000 appraisal.
Their fury, demanding her original $79,000 purchase price, ignited a family firestorm, with manipulative texts guilting her over childhood vacations and threats to her future kids. Reddit overwhelmingly sides with her, but is she the asshole, or is her family’s pressure a toxic tactic?
The Redditor’s position is economically sound. From 2020 to 2022, U.S. home prices surged dramatically due to low interest rates, pandemic demand, and supply shortages.
According to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller National Home Price Index, prices jumped 18.6% year-over-year by September 2021, with continued growth into 2022.
Adjusting for her $10,000 in renovations and general inflation (CPI rose about 13-15% over the period), her $105,000 ask reflects fair market value, not greed.
As a psychologist, she’s acutely aware of her parents’ patterns, denying health issues, living beyond means, and refusing accountability (her mom won’t work; her dad drinks post-transplant), which have drained her brother of $60,000.
Offering priority access and a below-appraisal price shows compassion; demanding she subsidize their choices with a $30,000 “discount” crosses into entitlement.
Her family’s backlash, however, reeks of manipulation. Texts weaponizing childhood memories and cursing her future scream emotional blackmail, a classic tactic in dysfunctional dynamics.
Family therapist Dr. Harriet Lerner, in a 2025 Psychology Today article, warns, “Guilt-tripping over money erodes boundaries and fosters resentment, especially when one member’s poor decisions burden others”.
The update, settling at $97,500 after threats, confirms the pressure worked, but at what cost to her self-respect and family ties? Her brothers and others enabling this (while ignoring her parents’ root issues) enable the cycle, leaving her isolated.
This feud spotlights the pitfalls of mixing family and finances. The Redditor could protect herself by setting firings: communicate via email, involve a neutral realtor for appraisals, and remind relatives their “solutions” (like her grandparents selling) are off the table.
Therapy for her and her brother might unpack the enabling patterns, while a family mediator could facilitate fair discussions. Ultimately, her house is her asset, earned through smart choices, not a bailout fund.
Readers, what’s your take? Was the Redditor greedy for seeking market value after her investments, or should family ties trump fair pricing? How do you handle manipulative money demands from relatives?
Here are the comments of Reddit users:
The majority of users sided with the original poster (NTA), arguing that selling the house at market value, around $110,000, accounting for the $79,000 purchase in 2020, $10,000 in renovations, and cumulative inflation of about 24% through mid-2025 that has eroded the dollar’s purchasing power, is a fair economic decision in a seller’s market where home prices have appreciated roughly 45% since 2020.
They criticized the family for pressuring a “family discount” to subsidize the aunt and uncle’s poor financial choices, suggesting relatives contribute the difference themselves or redirect wedding funds to the cause, while emphasizing that oversharing purchase details fueled the drama.


A minority (YTA) highlighted the irony of the OP accepting a $20,000 break from a non-relative teacher yet refusing similar kindness to struggling family, though even some conceded a price covering costs plus fees as reasonable.
This Redditor’s bid for a fair house sale, $105,000 after $10,000 in sweat equity and a market boom, unleashed a torrent of guilt and greed accusations from her debt-ridden parents and enabling relatives.
Settling at $97,500 ended the immediate fight, but the manipulative texts and wedding funding pull reveal deeper toxicity. Was she right to value her investment over blind loyalty, or should she have mirrored her teacher’s kindness with a steeper discount?
With student debt and stepkids looming, how would you price family “help” without losing your peace? Drop your thoughts below!








