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Unemployed Wife Hires Maid With Husband’s Earnings While He Works Long Hours And Helps With Chores

by Jeffrey Stone
December 14, 2025
in Social Issues

A newlywed husband’s grueling work schedule turned their once-balanced chore split into chaos, leaving the home messy and his exhausted wife calling in a biweekly maid to whip things back into shape.

What seemed like a practical fix exploded into fury when he demanded she foot the bill from her own savings, refusing to dip into their joint funds, especially after it surfaced she’d been jobless for months, with him carrying every penny of the income while still pitching in on meals and cleaning.

A newlywed’s decision to hire a maid sparks debate over chore fairness amid unemployment.

Unemployed Wife Hires Maid With Husband's Earnings While He Works Long Hours And Helps With Chores
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for hiring a maid to help me with household chores?'

Me and my husband (f31, m33) have been married for almost a year, and we usually have a good arrangement for sharing chores.

He's recently gotten really swamped at work, if he's not working in the office then he's either working at home or tired.

What this means is that he's not keeping up with his portion of the housework and I have to do most of it.

I do understand it's his job, but this is a lot for me as well so I decided to hire a maid to come in every couple of weeks.

She came around for the first time a few days ago. My husband isn't at all happy with this

and is saying it's not much and I should be able to take care of it myself, and he does what he can.

If I really need a maid, then he's telling me to pay for her using my personal savings.

I told him that's not fair on me, and we've been going back and forth on this.

I know it's a silly issue but it's kind of blown up now, and my sister suggested I make a post here. So AITA?

This Redditor’s situation highlights a common hiccup in many relationships: shifting chores when one partner’s workload spikes, or in this case, when employment status changes entirely. The post painted a picture of a supportive spouse understanding the husband’s busy season, yet feeling overwhelmed enough to hire outside help.

But comments flooded in pointing out a key detail buried deeper: the poster hasn’t been employed for over six months, meaning the husband is the sole breadwinner while still trying to pitch in on cooking and cleaning when he can.

It’s easy to see the frustration. Long hours at the office or even at home leave little energy for scrubbing floors or meal prep. Yet, on the flip, having full days at home opens up time that could tackle those tasks, lightening the load for the exhausted partner coming through the door.

This ties into broader conversations about family dynamics and how couples navigate unequal contributions. Research shows that perceptions of fairness in dividing home responsibilities play a huge role in relationship satisfaction.

According to a 2007 Pew Research Center survey, sharing household chores ranked third in importance for a successful marriage, with 62% of adults saying it is very important, behind only faithfulness and a happy sexual relationship.

Broadening out, these imbalances often reflect lingering societal patterns around work and home roles. Even today, studies indicate women frequently handle more routine daily tasks like cleaning and cooking, regardless of employment status.

Another Pew Research Center report in 2023 found that in opposite-sex U.S. marriages, women pick up a heavier load when it comes to household chores and caregiving responsibilities, while men spend more time on paid work and leisure.

One article from the Greater Good Magazine at UC Berkeley notes that unfair divisions not only strain well-being but can hurt both partners’ mental health and the relationship overall. It states: “It’s not just inequality but the perception of unfairness that hurts couples – the men as well as the women.” This rings true here, where the husband’s pushback seems rooted in feeling the financial and emotional weight alone.

Relationship experts emphasize communication as key to smoothing these bumps. Neutral advice often suggests sitting down to reassess divisions based on current realities, rather than sticking rigidly to old agreements. Some couples find success in treating home management as a “job” for the non-working partner during transitional periods, while others opt for open talks about budgeting for help if needed.

Ultimately, flexibility and empathy go a long way: acknowledging the stress of job hunting or overtime, while recognizing the invisible effort in keeping a home running smoothly.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Some people judge YTA because the OP is unemployed and should handle more housework while the husband works full-time.

Pale-Mammoth-9340 − YTA

- So you currently have no job (and haven't had one since the end of last year)

- You don't mention kids so I'm going to assume there isn't any

- Your husband does (or did before he got a heavier workload) all the cooking and sounds like a lot of the cleaning and other housework too, while working a...

- Now that he can't keep up the pace with chores, you can't chip in despite sitting at home all day

- You don't need that much time to relax, most adults don't.

If you don't have a job - and this goes for male, female and non binary partners -

you should be doing a lot more around the house than the working partner to begin with.

He's completely right, if she wants a maid, she can pay for it with her own savings. Edited to add judgement

Medium-Antelope-4593 − YTA why did you not include the fact that you are not working?

All of the financial burden is on him. Are there kids involved that would make you less able to clean?

YouSayWotNow − Your original breakdown of chores between the two of you was made when you were both working, right?

You are now out of a job and he is the only one bringing in an income. And yet you expect the division of chores to stay the same?

How much time do you need for relaxing when you don't even have a job? Frankly, if I were in his shoes I'd be pretty p__sed off. YTA

nvorx − You’re at home all day? Yeah, YTA, OP. You want a maid because you’re lazy, hire one with your own money.

Some people changed their judgment to YTA upon learning the OP is unemployed and omitted that detail.

[Reddit User] − Edit. Changed to YTA since you are not working. When you work full time then you can make this argument.

[Reddit User] − EDIT: YTA - you are unemployed, if you don't like this, get a job

AlternativeAd3652 − Nope, the option for him to not cover his share of chores is absolutely not for you to pick up the slack willy nilly.

Either his chores don't get done and you live in a pigsty, or you get help and you BOTH pay for it.

Way to hide that you are currently unemployed! What are you doing all day?

You have more time than him, yes job hunting is work but it isn't full time work.

And looking after a house, even if you suck at it, without kids, is a couple days a week job maximum.

Cooking is literally one of the MAJOR household tasks. It has to be done daily, constantly,

you can't just ignore it and it requires a lot planning, skill and forward thinking.

Pick up the slack. He's swamped. Marriage isn't 50-50 all the time, and given that it is currently 100-0 financially you can pick up his chores for a while. YTA

Some people criticize the OP for being lazy, entitled, or a deadbeat while not contributing financially.

Just-Contribution418 − YTA. I just read that you’ve been out of work for the past 6 months,

which means your contributions financially aren’t there… meaning you should be making up for it with more contributions around the home.

If my husband lost his job and then hired a maid, I would be furious with him. How selfish.

RuleAfter8798 − YTA You're a deadbeat lmao. If you were a man, everyone would be yelling at your partner to divorce you lol.

[Reddit User] − YTA - so the key thing you’ve hidden from your post is that you are unemployed.

So he needs to work , cook and do chores… and you do what exactly? You sound lazy and entitled . How is any of this fair on him ?

[Reddit User] − Him being busy at work involves making the family money.

You doing nothing at home involves spending the family’s money (not “your own savings”). Unless you live in a royal estate or something, YTA.

Some people highlight the OP’s long-term unemployment and expectation for the husband to handle cooking and chores.

ThatBFjax − YTA. For what I read in a reply, you’re not working right now.

Actually, you haven’t worked for over half of your marriage, since you lost your job at then end of last year and haven’t been married for a year yet.

There’s no mention of kids or pets or a giant house, anything that would demand most of your time

for you not to be able to tend to the rest of the chores and justify hiring a maid with money you’re NOT making right now.

You expect him to cook because you’re not good at it, so on top of working, having the stress of being the one person

making the hours to pay the bills, he has to worry about cooking a whole meal cause you’re not happy with a sandwich. Come on, now.

thisistemporary1213 − Yta. You are not contributing financially to the household so it shouldn't be a 50/50 split on chores.

He's working all day, you are at home. You decided to spend the money he is actively earning on a maid without even consulting him.

[Reddit User] − YTA, it's a lot of work to keep a house clean and neat. If it's not that much to do then have him take care of everything...

Get off the couch, learn to cook if you want to eat better and find a job if you don't want to do housework.

Some people seek more information about prior chore arrangements and work status.

v2den − INFO: What are the chores arrangement beforehand? Do both of your work full time? How are joint finance distributed/handled?

This maid-hiring mix-up shines a light on how quickly small issues can snowball when life’s stresses shift the home balance. In the end, most agree the non-working partner stepping up more feels fair, especially without kids or massive estates in play. But hey, marriages thrive on adaptation and chat, not scorekeeping.

Do you think expecting the at-home spouse to handle most chores during unemployment is reasonable, or should couples always split 50/50 no matter what? How would you redraw the chore map if roles flipped in your home? Drop your thoughts below, we’re all ears!

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jeffrey brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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