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Man Refuses To Let Wife’s Family Use His Airbnb Kitchen Without Paying For The Extra Cost, Is He Unreasonable?

by Katy Nguyen
December 17, 2025
in Social Issues

For a family vacation, one man thought renting an Airbnb in Southern California would be the best way to accommodate his family’s needs.

With a son who has a severe nut allergy, cooking at home would ensure his safety and allow everyone to spend quality time together.

However, when his wife’s family backed out of the shared house plan and booked hotel rooms instead, things took an unexpected turn.

Now, his in-laws are asking to use the kitchen in the Airbnb to cook their meals, which he feels is unfair given the extra costs he and his wife are shouldering.

He’s torn between wanting to help and feeling taken advantage of.

Man Refuses To Let Wife’s Family Use His Airbnb Kitchen Without Paying For The Extra Cost, Is He Unreasonable?
Not the actual photo

'AITA for telling my wife's family they can't cook in our Airbnb?'

My wife and I have 2 kids (6 and 3), and my wife has 2 siblings.

One brother (living in Cali and soon to be married later this summer), one sister (married with 3 kids all under 10), and both her parents (still married).

We are pretty close with my wife's family, spend a lot of time with them, and all the kid cousins get along super well.

I have a very good relationship with everyone. The brother is getting married later this summer in Southern California.

The rest of the family, including us, lives in the Midwest. We've planned a big 7-night family vacation down to SoCal for the wedding.

I proposed that our family (4 of us) + my sister in laws family (2 adults, 3 kids) and my wife's parents (2 adults) rent a house for the 7...

-More space for everybody instead of living out of a suitcase in a hotel for 7 nights.

-Have a kitchen available to cook and eat together instead of eating out for every single meal.

-My son has a severe anaphylactic allergy to nuts, so eating out can often be stressful for us as a family.

Initially, everyone was on board. I estimated that renting a large enough house (via Airbnb) would be approx $300/night per family unit (so $900/night split 3 ways).

There are cheaper ones, but they would be too far from the wedding venue.

My sister-in-law and my parents-in-law learned that hotel rooms are available for approximately $150/night.

They've now bailed on the house idea and have reserved hotel rooms.

It's their money, and I understand renting a house is a lot of money to pay above the hotel rates. I have no issue with them changing their mind.

My wife and I still want to stay in a house, mainly for access to a full kitchen, so we booked an Airbnb.

The smaller house will cost us about $350/night. So we'll be spending about $350 more than planned ($50 x 7 nights).

We've booked the Airbnb, and the free cancellation period has now expired. We can't cancel without losing money.

When my wife's family learned that we booked an Airbnb, they said, "Oh great! We can come to your house to cook food".

I said, "No. If you wanted to cook, then you should have reserved a house with us, not make us pay the extra for accommodations with a kitchen, and then...

If you want to use the kitchen, cover the extra $50/night we have to pay, and then you can use it." They say I'm being unreasonable and greedy.

AITA? The dollar figures are not the real numbers, but they get the story across.

Traveling as an extended family, especially for a major event like a wedding, brings both opportunity for connection and potential for conflict.

Family vacations are known to strengthen relationships and produce cherished memories, but they also demand negotiation, planning, and compromise between individuals with different needs and priorities.

In this situation, the OP proposed renting a house rather than staying in separate hotel rooms for a 7‑night trip to Southern California.

The motivations were practical, not just for comfort: having a full kitchen would make meal planning easier and safer for their child with a severe nut allergy.

When others opted out of the shared rental to book cheaper hotel rooms, the underlying agreement about shared use of space, including the kitchen, became unclear.

This breakdown highlights a common theme in family vacation planning, decisions that were initially collective can become points of contention when individual cost‑benefit calculations differ.

Experts on family travel emphasize that clear communication and shared expectations are essential to reducing conflict.

Establishing travel rules, covering finances, responsibilities, and boundaries, before everyone commits can help prevent misunderstandings about who pays for what or how shared spaces are used.

Without such groundwork, individual interpretations of fairness can clash, even among close family members.

From a financial perspective, many travel guides suggest having an upfront conversation about cost‑sharing formulas for shared accommodations.

Options include splitting costs equally, proportionally based on family size, or dividing expenses based on expected usage.

Without a pre‑trip cost‑sharing agreement, the request to contribute after the fact can feel like an unwelcome obligation, even if it is financially reasonable.

The OP’s stance can be viewed through this lens: he incurred extra cost for the Airbnb with kitchen access, largely for his own family’s needs.

It’s not inherently “greedy” to expect that others who directly benefit from that amenity share the cost associated with it. Indeed, fairness in splitting costs is a widely recommended practice when multiple families travel together.

At the same time, emotions can complicate such practical matters. Family members may interpret boundaries around money or shared space as personal rejection rather than financial logic.

This is where setting expectations early and framing conversations with empathy becomes crucial.

For example, articulating reasons for a decision (child’s allergy accommodations, desire to cook together, saving on meals) while inviting input on shared costs could ease tensions and help others feel included rather than excluded.

So, is the OP unreasonable? From a purely fairness and planning perspective, asking that those who want to use an amenity share its cost is not inherently unfair. However, the emotional context, especially within a close family, matters just as much.

Strong relationships benefit from clarity and compromise, not just rules. A proactive pre‑trip discussion about lodging, cost‑splitting, and kitchen use might have prevented confusion and hurt feelings.

In future group trips, the OP and his family might discuss cost‑sharing formulas ahead of booking, outlining who pays what and why, and ensuring everyone agrees before commitments are made.

This could safeguard both financial fairness and family harmony, honoring the spirit of a shared vacation while respecting individual boundaries.

By weaving clear expectations into the travel plan, families can navigate the tradeoffs of shared space and shared costs with less stress and more connection.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

These commenters all support the OP, agreeing that it’s unreasonable for the in-laws to expect to use the kitchen without contributing financially.

Only-Ingenuity7889 − Hard no, just based on the peanut allergy and their possibly contaminating the area. NTA.

maybeRaeMaybeNot − NTA. Read the rules on Airbnb. There is a good chance that their even coming over will give you a nice fine/fee.

We always have issues finding rentals that allow niece/nephew/mil to come over for a game night/pizza night when visiting family.

It would fall under rules about “parties” or extra guests.

jrm1102 − NTA. This is quite entitled. You’re correct. If they wanted a kitchen, they should have gone in on this with you.

These commenters emphasize that the issue isn’t just about cooking, but also about privacy and fairness.

RelevantSchool1586 − NTA. It's not even about the cooking; it's about privacy and personal space.

You can't just invite yourself to someone's house/hotel room. It's one thing to share a big space with your extended family.

It's a completely different thing to cram 10 people into a small place just because grandpa wants to cook himself some eggs.

If anything, I wouldn't have put a price tag on it; I'd just say the place was too small to have people over

SadFlatworm1436 − NTA, so they get to save half of their daily costs, get their room cleaned daily, and use your Airbnb kitchen to save on eating costs? Hell no!!

KimB-booksncats-11 − "They say I'm being unreasonable and greedy." Funny, I was just thinking the same thing about them. NTA.

This commenter brings up a valid point about the unfairness of how the initial cost was split.

staygoldsodapop − YTA for the unfairness of the initial split. You should have been splitting by rooms or per person, not "family units."

Who would a 5-person family be paying the same as your wife's parents, who are only two people?

Of course, they'd rather get a hotel room than subsidize your housing.

These users bring attention to Airbnb’s specific rules, including limitations on the number of guests and the risk of being kicked out if those rules are violated.

Trick_Delivery4609 − NTA Most Airbnbs actually have rules that you cant have more people over.

So if you book for 4 guests, you can't magically have 7 extras show up for dinner. So I would just tell them that!

Significant_Yak_5371 − NTA, please also keep in mind that most hosts in SoCal limit the number of guests that can be in the unit, and often they have a device...

If an extra fix or six cell phones show up, the host gets an alert, and you get kicked out without a refund.

Romance-BookWorm-55 − NTA. I know Airbnbs have rules about extra guests, but it also seems like they waited for you to rent a house and then tried to take advantage...

Ok_Conversation9750 − NTA. They want the advantages of the house without paying for it.

This commenter offers a compromise, suggesting that the in-laws buy all the ingredients for a meal in exchange for using the kitchen.

curvycurly − NAH. Let them buy all the ingredients to cook and count it as even.

They are feeding your family of 2 adults and 2 children in exchange for the use of the kitchen. Done.

It's petty and weird to deny them access without paying you.

They didn't convince you to pick a house; they were totally fine going without a kitchen.

Enjoy some great family meals and make some memories.

These users stress the importance of respecting the Airbnb’s rules and maintaining a peaceful vacation environment.

olerndurt − NTA. First off, it’s not your decision to make whether or not people come over.

We just stayed at a place for a week, and the rules were quite clear on extra ‘guests’, and they must be approved ahead of time by the owners.

Of course, the obvious reason is they are cheap, and apparently want to come over and make a big mess for you to be responsible for cleaning prior to leaving....

Ipso-Pacto-Facto − I wouldn’t be able to relax or chill with guests every night, cooking in a small rental space.

Meet them at a park for pizza one night. The ab&b has limits on guests, probably, as well. NTA.

The OP’s request seems reasonable, he and his wife are covering extra costs for the benefit of their family’s convenience, yet now his relatives are asking to use that convenience without contributing to the expense.

While it’s understandable to want to spend time with loved ones and share a kitchen, is it fair to expect others to contribute to the extra costs? Could a compromise have been reached that would have avoided hard feelings?

What do you think, was the OP being unreasonable, or is he right to stand his ground? Share your thoughts below!

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 1/2 votes | 50%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 1/2 votes | 50%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/2 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/2 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/2 votes | 0%

Katy Nguyen

Katy Nguyen

Hey there! I’m Katy Nguyễn, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. I’m a woman in my 30s with a passion for storytelling and a degree in Journalism. My goal is to craft engaging, heartfelt articles that resonate with our readers, whether I’m diving into the latest lifestyle trends, exploring travel adventures, or sharing tips on personal growth. I’ve written about everything from cozy coffee shop vibes to navigating career changes with confidence. When I’m not typing away, you’ll likely find me sipping a matcha latte, strolling through local markets, or curled up with a good book under fairy lights. I love sunrises, yoga, and chasing moments of inspiration.

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