Living with roommates can either create lifelong friendships or turn into a daily headache. When you’re randomly assigned to share space with someone who clashes with your personality, even the smallest issues, like dishes in the sink or laundry left behind, can escalate into full-on war.
That’s exactly what happened between two college students who couldn’t stand each other. After months of passive-aggressive battles, one of them decided to weaponize apartment management to gain the upper hand. But instead of winning, she triggered a chain of events that flipped the situation completely upside down.
After eight months of back-and-forth irritation, the roommate filed a complaint

















College roommates can be unpredictable, but one student’s “petty revenge” ended up forcing her nightmare roommate to move out.
The OP shared an apartment with three other girls. Two were fine, but the one who shared her bathroom constantly clashed with her, dirty dishes left for days, wet laundry tossed on the floor, endless passive-aggressive tension.
After months of mutual sniping, the roommate reported OP for “bullying.” Management issued a warning: neither could touch the other’s belongings. Any violation would mean fines or even eviction.
The roommate left the office smiling, clearly thinking she’d cornered OP. But she overlooked one major fact, almost everything in the apartment, from kitchen gear to bathroom essentials, belonged to OP.
Seizing the moment, OP stripped their shared bathroom of her items and posted a whiteboard in the kitchen listing every pot, pan, mug, and appliance she owned. She declared her roommate couldn’t use any of it without written permission.
When the roommate came home, she had a meltdown. Screaming turned into threats of lawyers from her father, but management wasn’t moved. They told her to deal with it or pay $500 to switch apartments. Within a week, she moved out.
Research from the Journal of College Student Development shows unresolved roommate tensions can impact academic performance and mental health. But what’s striking here is how rules designed to prevent “bullying” can unintentionally escalate the petty arms race if poorly applied.
According to housing experts, the healthiest solution isn’t punishment, but mediation, structured conversations where roommates identify boundaries, shared expectations, and ways to de-escalate. In fact, many student housing offices now train resident assistants to facilitate these talks rather than rely solely on punitive measures.
Still, there’s a broader lesson: shared housing only works when everyone contributes. Studies on communal living stress that fairness in chores and resources is key to reducing conflict. Mooching on essentials like kitchenware or cleaning supplies often becomes a flashpoint because it combines money, effort, and daily inconvenience.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
One user laughed at the idea of her father threatening lawyers over roommate drama

Some commenters shared their own battle with a bandwidth-hogging roommate



















Some noted it’s always the roommates who contribute nothing to the communal pot who stir the most trouble





Would you have handled it the same way, playing by the rules but enforcing them with maximum sting, or tried to find a truce? And what’s the pettiest roommate revenge you’ve ever pulled off (or witnessed)?








