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Older Roommates Pressure Broke 18-Year-Old To Fund Their Dream Decor While She Happily Lives In ‘Concrete Box’

by Jeffrey Stone
November 22, 2025
in Social Issues

An 18-year-old finally lands her first real apartment, only to face two older roommates – 23 and 33 – who demand she funds their full-blown Pinterest makeover for the bare common areas. One lone couch sits in the echoing living room; they want fairy lights, rugs, and throw pillows, split three ways because “that’s fair.”

She shrugs: “Decorate all you want, just nothing permanent” and refuses to pay a cent for knick-knacks she never asked for and doesn’t like. Cue the meltdown: guilt trips, dirty looks, and the 33-year-old loudly telling guests the place looks depressing “because the teenager won’t contribute.” Now the concrete-box lover is the villain for daring to keep her money and her minimalism.

An 18-year-old refuses to pay for roommates’ decor, triggers fight over blank walls never asked for.

Older Roommates Pressure Broke 18-Year-Old To Fund Their Dream Decor While She Happily Lives In 'Concrete Box'
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for wanting to live in a "concrete box" instead of paying for my roommates' decorations?'

I (18F) live in a rent-by-bedroom apartment with two other people (33F and 23F) who both moved in at the end of August.

I’ve been here since late June, and my previous roommates who had lived here for a year took all the decoration and extra furniture with them when they moved out.

Personally, I do not care about decoration at all. My friends make fun of me and say every room I’ve lived in looks like a concrete box or jail cell,

but I hardly spend time in my room and find no joy in decoration.

Recently, my roommates brought up buying decorations together because to be fair,

the common area is completely empty except basic kitchen stuff and one couch.

I don’t mind and told them as long as they followed the lease’s rules on alteration, I don’t care what they do to the common area.

They insisted that we should all go get decorations together and because I also used the common area, I should chip in.

This I still refused because I genuinely have no use for any sprucing up. I also said that I didn’t want to spend extra money on decorating.

Working 20 hours a week, I can pay off my own rent and utilities and have some fun money left over.

My parents are gracious enough to pay for my tuition left after scholarships, food, and any other expenses.

Somehow they came to the conclusion that because I recently bought a bunch clothes from the mall and because my parents still support me,

I should have plenty of money to spend. For context, they are both independent adults and pay for everything themselves.

Well, I told them no again and that they can do whatever they want, but I’m not going to contribute.

It’s been a week or two and I don’t see any decor in the living room, but the other day, one of my roommates (33F) invited some guy over.

He made a comment about how sparse the living room was and my roommate said it was because specifically I didn’t want to decorate.

She said it jokingly but it honestly read as passive aggressive considering the context.

I’m not going to be convinced, but am I the a__hole for not contributing to a shared space?

My best friend did say my room and the general apartment was pretty sad-looking, but I’d boot up the Sims if I wanted to decorate.

Meeting the roommates from hell (or at least the roommates from Etsy) can feel like stepping onto the set of a low-budget sitcom.

On one side we have two grown women who apparently arrived with zero furniture or decor of their own, and on the other a freshman who’s perfectly happy with blank walls and functional furniture.

The clash isn’t really about throw blankets, it’s about wildly different priorities and a sneaky sense of entitlement.

From the roommates’ perspective, an empty living room is embarrassing, especially when guests notice. They see the common areas as “shared,” so naturally everyone should chip in for the upgrade.

From OP’s perspective, she didn’t create the emptiness (previous tenants took everything), she doesn’t enjoy decor, and forcing her to pay for something that brings her zero joy feels unfair.

Both sides have a point, but only one side is trying to make the youngest, least financially independent person subsidize their aesthetic.

This situation shines a light on a surprisingly common roommate headache: who pays for “vibes”? A 2023 Apartment List survey found that 38% of renters have argued with roommates over shared household expenses, with decor and furniture upgrades being a top trigger. The older roommates’ passive-aggressive blame game also hints at an age-power dynamic that’s uncomfortable to watch.

Financial planner Anna Sergunina advises on roommate finances: “That way, in the future, if something comes up, you’ll have a document you can refer to.”

That quote fits this story perfectly. The roommates assumed “we all benefit, we all pay,” but never asked whether OP actually values the benefit. Negotiation never happened, guilt-tripping did.

Neutral advice? Put it in writing. A simple roommate agreement stating “common-area upgrades are optional and paid only by interested parties” prevents this exact meltdown.

If the older two want the space Instagram-ready, they can fund it themselves and take the items when they leave, no messy fights over who owns a $12 fake plant.

OP could even offer a tiny compromise (like splitting a cheap rug) to keep the peace, but she’s under zero obligation. Your home should reflect the people who care enough to pay for it, not guilt the ones who don’t.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Some people say NTA because the older roommates are unfairly pressuring an 18-year-old to pay for non-essential decor they want.

Time-Tie-231 − NTA They want you to pay for something for them and are sore because you won't!

When they are being passive aggressive call it out. And point out their failing logic.

E. g. 'I'm not stopping you. ' I hope you don't get overpowered by your house mates. They are both older than you.

Thari-97 − NTA. Kinda pathetic of them considering the age gap

Jerico_Hill − It's not appropriate for a 32 yr old to be leaning on an 18yr old for decorating money.

Same for the 23 year old but less so If they want a nice space beyond functional, they pay for it.

Some people say NTA and point out practical problems with splitting decor costs, especially ownership when someone moves out.

[Reddit User] − NTA What happens when one of move out? Argue how much of 1/3 of the depreciated value of a throw pillow you are owed?

Helpful-Alligator − NTA. What’s gonna happen when somebody moves out? If they want them, they can buy and keep them.

textureworkshop − So if you all pay for the decorations, who keeps them when someone moves?

At least if everyone buys their own, it's clear who owns them.

Some people say NTA because decor is a personal want, not a shared necessity, and OP gains no real benefit from it.

creakyforest − NTA. I love decorating. Asking you about it is one thing.

Walking back their plans after you decline to chip in and pinning their decision on you is very weird.

LoudCrickets72 − NTA. Decorating the common space is not your idea, and if left to your own devices, you wouldn’t decorate at all.

So why should you suddenly have to pay to decorate? Because your roommates want to?

You’re not going to derive any benefit, satisfaction, or joy from decorating, so why should you pay for it?

tinyblueflamingo − How are they so old with no stuff? That’s strange and they’re weird. Did they know each other before this?

0liv0 − NTA you don’t have to contribute if you don’t want to, and your roommate was wrong for blaming you as you already have her permission to decorate by...

That being said, you may not appreciate it now but decorations are what makes a house a home.

At the end of the day, nobody is entitled to your money just because they want prettier walls, especially not when you’re 18, working part-time, and perfectly content with your “jail cell chic” aesthetic. The roommates can buy their own macramé and stop throwing shade.

Would you have caved and chipped in $50 to avoid the drama, or held the line like OP? How do you handle roommates who want luxury on a shared budget? Drop your verdict below!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

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

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