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Woman Refuses To Cancel Long-Planned Vacation So Coworker Can Take Her Honeymoon

by Layla Bui
December 15, 2025
in Social Issues

Planning ahead doesn’t always protect you from workplace drama. One employee thought she had done everything right, submitting her vacation request months early, coordinating with management, and preparing for a long-awaited trip to see family overseas. It was a rare opportunity she didn’t take lightly.

Then a coworker’s wedding plans entered the picture. After waiting too long to request time off, the coworker asked for a favor that came with strings attached: cancel the trip so she could take her honeymoon.

When the answer was no, the situation turned uncomfortable, with colleagues questioning priorities and labeling the refusal as selfish.

Is a honeymoon automatically more important than a long-planned family visit? Or is this a case of poor planning becoming someone else’s problem? Scroll down to see how this conflict played out.

A planned holiday sparks tension when a coworker asks for it to fund her honeymoon

Woman Refuses To Cancel Long-Planned Vacation So Coworker Can Take Her Honeymoon
not the actual photo

'AITAH for refusing to give up my vacation days so my coworker can go on her honeymoon?'

I work at a small company where vacation time is pretty limited, and we have to request it months in advance.

I put in my request almost a year ago to take a two-week vacation during the holidays.

My plan was to visit family, who live out of the country, something I only get to do once every few years.

Recently, a coworker of mine, who’s getting married, came up to me

and asked if I’d be willing to give up my vacation days so she could go on her honeymoon.

She apparently didn’t realize how quickly the days would fill up and waited too long to request her time off.

Now, the only way she can go is if someone cancels, and since I have one of the longest vacation blocks, she came to me first.

I told her I was really sorry, but I can’t give up my time.

This trip means a lot to me, and it’s the only time I can see my family this year.

She wasn’t happy and told me I was being selfish for not accommodating her "once-in-a-lifetime" event.

Now, a few other coworkers are chiming in, suggesting I could be more flexible

since I don’t have "special circumstances" like a wedding.

I feel bad, but I also planned this trip far in advance, and it’s important to me.

AITA for not giving up my vacation so she can go on her honeymoon?

In workplaces, conflict often doesn’t come from cruelty but from competing needs being forced into comparison. When time off is scarce, people are quietly pushed to decide whose life event deserves more weight and that pressure can turn ordinary colleagues into reluctant adversaries.

In this case, the OP wasn’t refusing out of selfishness or lack of empathy. She was protecting a long-planned trip to see family abroad, something that happens rarely and carries emotional significance beyond “vacation.”

Her coworker’s request reframed the issue as a moral obligation rather than a scheduling problem, implying that weddings automatically outrank other meaningful experiences. That framing placed the OP in an unfair emotional bind: either surrender something deeply important or accept social judgment.

The discomfort here isn’t about unwillingness to help, it’s about being asked to absorb the consequences of someone else’s late planning.

A broader psychological perspective reveals a common workplace bias. Celebratory milestones like weddings are culturally elevated as “once-in-a-lifetime,” while quieter needs, family connection, rest, and cultural ties are treated as optional or flexible.

This creates what psychologists describe as comparative suffering, where people feel pressured to justify their needs by proving they’re more “special” than someone else. The OP’s coworkers may not intend harm, but they are participating in a system that ranks personal worthiness instead of respecting fairness.

Expert insight supports the OP’s position. Writing for Psychology Today, social psychologist Dr. Susan Biali explains that boundary conflicts at work often arise when requests are framed as moral obligations rather than optional favors.

She notes that when employees feel pressured to justify their personal time, resentment and trust erosion follow, especially when flexibility is treated as something others are entitled to, not something freely given.

Similarly, Dr. Monica Vermani emphasizes that planned time off, particularly for reconnecting with loved ones, is essential for mental health and burnout prevention.

Undermining these needs by labeling them “less important” can increase emotional exhaustion, even when the pressure comes from coworkers rather than management.

Viewed through this lens, the OP wasn’t obligated to solve a problem she didn’t create. Her vacation wasn’t spare currency; it was secured under the same rules everyone else follows. While the coworker’s disappointment is understandable, disappointment alone doesn’t create entitlement.

A realistic resolution doesn’t require guilt or sacrifice. Compassion can coexist with boundaries. In healthy workplaces, favors remain voluntary, and life events aren’t ranked like competitions. Sometimes the most reasonable answer is also the hardest to accept: I can care about your situation and still say no.

See what others had to share with OP:

These commenters agreed poor planning isn’t an emergency and consequences are on her

Spoopyowo − NTA, I am assuming she planned her wedding for a while;

it's not your problem that she didn't think ahead. Enjoy your vacation!!

Amazing_Reality2980 − NTA You are not being selfish. Her poor planning does not constitute an emergency for you.

She should have planned better and put in for the time off as soon as she could.

Now she's got to deal with the consequences of her procrastination.

If she or your other coworkers keep giving you a bad time about this, take it to HR or your boss.

It's not ok for them to be pressuring you and guilt tripping you about this. They're bullying you and creating a hostile work environment.

Unpleasant_Advice − NTA, the wedding and honeymoon should also have been planned well in advance.

shammy_dammy − NTA. She failed to adequately plan. That's on her. Sounds like your coworkers are volunteering, though

This group backed OP holding firm and told coworkers to give up their own time

clearheaded01 − NTA Apparently her own honeymoon was not important enough to secure time off for it.

Now, a few other coworkers are chiming in, suggesting I could be more flexible

since I don’t have "special circumstances" like a wedding Let them. Give up. On their vacation, then...

Own-Whereas-7420 − Absolutely NOT. NTA, I repeat, NTA!!

And the peanut gallery coworkers you have need to hush.

You aren’t selfish for taking the time that you put in well in advance. People make me sick .

She can reschedule their honeymoon trip, it doesn’t HAVE to be right after the wedding.

Maximum_Yard_8485 − NTA tell those a__hole colleagues to give up their time

Hyche862 − NTA “I’m sorry I value my family time more than you value your honeymoon/wedding.

If you valued your thing you would have actually appropriately planned for it like I did my family time

These Redditors flagged workplace pressure as inappropriate and suggested HR involvement

Significant_Planter − So let me get this right, she's asking people to give up their vacation days

and came to you first and now you're wondering why everybody else is pressuring you to give it up?

Obviously because if you don't she's going to ask them next LOL    Talk to HR. This is not okay behavior!

She's creating a hostile work environment by acting like her wedding is more important than your family vacation.

And the next time somebody says that you should give up your day just look at them and slow blink

and then say "this is SUCH good news I will tell bridezilla that you're going to give her your time

since you think vacation should be given up for her"

Distinct-Ad3901 − Visiting family out of country is absolutely special circumstances. NTA

Snackinpenguin − NTA. Many people also delay their honeymoons.

It doesn’t HAVE to start the next day after their wedding.

Don’t think she was planning on paying you for your cancelled flight either or other non-refundable travel costs.

This group mixed humor and realism, mocking “once-in-a-lifetime” claims and entitlement

peakpenguins − NTA, it's not your fault she waited so long to request the time off,

and seeing your family is not less important than her honeymoon.

If people don't back off I wouldn't be afraid to pull some b__lshit like "I have to go, my grandma is dying!"

and watch them all feel real awkward. lol

srkaficionada65 − You’re NTA but my petty behind would totally cancel my vacation

IF and WHEN she pays me the equivalent of the greater of the PTO hours OR the cost of my travel

and she’d have to pay it upfront.

If she has money to plan a wedding and go on a honeymoon, she can pay me for inconveniencing me.

I bet if you proposed something similar, she’d freaking back off.

FionaFierce11 − 50% of weddings are once in a lifetime events. The other 50% plan better. NTA

[Reddit User] − Statistically speaking, weddings are no longer "once in a lifetime. " NTA.

Most readers agreed the employee wasn’t wrong, she was organized, clear, and firm in a situation where guilt tried to replace fairness. While weddings feel urgent, they don’t cancel out other people’s lives or long-standing plans.

Should coworkers ever be expected to sacrifice approved time for someone else’s milestone? Or does responsibility end at planning ahead? Drop your thoughts below.

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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