Imagine this: you’re fresh out of uni, scraping by on an intern’s paycheck in a new city, when your parents start begging you to visit home once a month. You say yes—after all, it’s your childhood home and free meals, right?
Wrong.
Out of nowhere, they slap you with a “rent” bill just for staying the weekend. One Redditor was floored when their parents pulled this move, and their clever response—crashing with a friend nearby for free—sparked a full-on family feud.
Reddit’s lighting up with hot takes: Is this a quirky parenting lesson or a cash grab disguised as “teaching responsibility”? Let’s unpack this spicy saga.

The Story That Started It All








This Redditor, a 20-something navigating early adulthood 150km from home, was doing their best to juggle bills, groceries, and the occasional call from Mom asking, “When are you visiting next?”
They made the monthly trip, as requested. But then their parents decided it was time to “teach responsibility” by charging rent… for weekend stays in the room they grew up in.
Their response? Stay with a friend nearby instead.
That’s when things really blew up. The parents accused them of “avoiding adulthood,” even though they were already financially independent and doing their best on a tight budget.
Is Charging ‘Visit Rent’ Ever Okay?
Coming home is supposed to be about hugs and home cooking—not invoices.
While the fee wasn’t massive, the Redditor made it clear it was never about the money—it was about the principle. Charging rent for family visits felt transactional, even punitive. They were already covering their own living expenses; this just felt like a shakedown in the name of “life lessons.”
The parents claimed it was about responsibility. But from Reddit’s perspective, it looked a lot more like control.
This story touches on a deeper tension: the generational divide around money, adulthood, and independence.
According to a 2023 Pew Research study, 59% of parents financially support their adult children in some way. Yet in this case, the script’s flipped—the parents want financial payback for time together.
Relationship expert Dr. John Gottman says that family relationships thrive on mutual respect and open communication (Psychology Today). What’s missing here? Communication.
This might not really be about rent—it could be about the parents feeling disconnected, wanting to reclaim a sense of structure, or just struggling with their child becoming truly independent. But instead of saying that, they sent a bill.
A better move? Start a conversation, not a conflict. A simple, “Hey, can we talk about this rent thing? It doesn’t feel right,” could’ve opened the door to a compromise—like helping with groceries or pitching in another way.
Reddit’s Got Thoughts, and They’re Sizzling!

Redditors agreed they weren’t the AH—this person made the mature choice to skip the visit rather than pay for unfair demands from their parents.





Redditors said they weren’t the asshole—if parents ask for visits, they shouldn’t charge rent.











Redditors agreed: if the parents want visits, they shouldn’t charge rent.




A Family Feud or a Teachable Moment?
This story raises the question: Is charging your kid rent to visit ever okay? Sure, teaching financial responsibility is important—but there’s a big difference between helping someone grow and making them feel unwelcome in their own home.
In the end, the Redditor’s workaround wasn’t petty—it was practical. But the bigger issue remains unresolved: when parents try to “parent” an already independent adult, things can get messy.
So what do you think? Were the parents trying to teach a lesson—or just pushing their kid away? And if you were in this Redditor’s shoes, would you pay up… or peace out?
Drop your take below—we’re all ears.








