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She Finally Cut a Freeloader From Her Subscription and Felt Guilty

by Carolyn Mullet
January 4, 2026
in Social Issues

A simple shared subscription turned into a quiet, years-long headache.

Splitting costs sounds easy. Everyone pays their share, the bill stays low, and nobody thinks twice about it. That is how this group plan started, with friends pooling money and keeping things casual. Over time, one unfamiliar name slipped into the mix, and the dynamic slowly changed.

Every six months, the same pattern repeated. Messages went unanswered. Promises arrived late. Payments followed only after reminders. What felt like a minor annoyance at first stretched into years of frustration. Still, the plan stayed intact, mostly out of politeness and avoidance of conflict.

This time felt different. Two full weeks passed without a reply. No explanation. No acknowledgment. Just silence.

At some point, patience turns into self-doubt. Is it kinder to wait longer, or fairer to draw a line? That question sat heavy as the deadline approached, along with the fear of looking unreasonable for finally saying enough.

Now, read the full story:

She Finally Cut a Freeloader From Her Subscription and Felt Guilty
Not the actual photo

'AITAH for removing someone from my subscription plan?'

I have a subscription with a couple other people for a service. They're mostly good friends I have with the exception of one friend who I don't talk to as...

To keep costs low when someone left, this friend asked someone she knew from school. I had never talked to this girl, but it was fine and it worked. This...

Everytime I ask for money (every 6 months), this girl is iffy to respond/give it. She would either tell me she'll send it over and will not unless I remind...

or respond after a good couple days. Keep in mind this is EVERY time I asked her over the course of the years.

Fast forward to today, I messaged her two weeks ago with zero response. This is the longest that I have heard nothing from her.

I sent her a check up message yesterday and today I asked if she could please respond.

If she doesn't respond by tonight, would I be the AH to just remove her and take the L on the money?

I want to give her the benefit of the doubt, but at the same time it's been two weeks with nothing from her.

I feel guilty about it, but I feel like there's nothing else I could do. It seems like she's just freeloading off of me at this point..

Edit: Update!! She ended up responding an hour ago (same day as this post) and sent over the money.

The reply was a little dry, but whatever I got the money. I did tell her that I would be ending the subscription altogether because some people dropped out

(not true at all and I have a close friend who will be taking her spot). I hate confrontation and would rather take the route to let it down that...

If she ever finds out the truth, then I would be honest but for now I will let it be. Thanks for everyone's input! I would've definitely removed her if...

Reading this feels painfully familiar to anyone who avoids confrontation. The issue was never the money itself. It was the repeated emotional labor of chasing someone who benefited from the arrangement while giving very little effort back.

That guilt makes sense. Cutting someone off feels harsh, even when the pattern is clear. Still, reliability matters. Quiet frustration builds when responsibility falls on one person alone.

This tension between kindness and boundaries shows up often in shared financial arrangements.

At its core, this situation revolves around informal financial boundaries.

Shared subscriptions rely on trust, consistency, and clear expectations. When one person repeatedly delays payment, the burden shifts. The organizer becomes the enforcer, accountant, and reminder system. Over time, that imbalance erodes goodwill.

According to a study from the American Psychological Association, unclear expectations in shared financial arrangements are a leading cause of interpersonal conflict. Even small amounts of money can trigger stress when responsibility feels one-sided.

Behavioral economists note that people often underestimate the social cost of small unpaid debts. Dr. Brad Klontz, a financial psychologist, explains that repeated late payments signal disregard rather than forgetfulness. “When someone consistently delays payment, it reflects avoidance and entitlement more than disorganization,” Klontz notes.

The pattern here matters. This was not a single missed payment. It occurred every six months for years. Research on boundary setting shows that patterns predict future behavior far more accurately than apologies or temporary improvements.

From a practical standpoint, subscription sharing works best with advance payment or automatic billing. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recommends upfront payment agreements for shared expenses to prevent exactly this type of friction.

Emotionally, the guilt comes from conflict avoidance. Psychologists link this response to fear of social rejection rather than actual wrongdoing. Dr. Harriet Lerner writes that people often tolerate unfairness to preserve harmony, even when harmony already broke.

Neutral advice from experts stays consistent. Set clear deadlines. Communicate consequences once. Follow through without repeated reminders. Removing access after nonpayment is not punishment. It is maintenance.

The update adds another layer. The payment arrived only after pressure. That reinforces the original concern. Avoiding confrontation through a polite excuse protected short-term peace but did not resolve the pattern.

The takeaway remains simple. Shared financial arrangements require shared responsibility. When effort flows in one direction, resentment follows.

Check out how the community responded:

Many commenters fully supported cutting her off and called the behavior freeloading.

Becalmandkind - She’s freeloading and wasting your time. Change the password and move on.

BackgroundHeat5080 - Five years of chasing payment is wild. You’ve done more than enough.

No_Wolf_1756 - Why feel guilty about removing someone who doesn’t pay?

Others suggested clear deadlines or zero tolerance moving forward.

AffectionateMood3794 - No response means no access. Simple and fair.

Gold_Mountain_4997 - Set a firm deadline once. After that, remove her.

Glitterwaffle1945 - You’re far more patient than most people.

A third group focused on boundaries and self-respect.

AZDarkknight - After the first chase, payment should be upfront.

Ruebee90 - Cut the headache and move on.

Lopsided_Tie1675 - The moment you chase an adult for money, it’s over.

This situation highlights how small, repeated issues quietly drain energy.

The subscription itself was never the real problem. The problem was responsibility falling on one person year after year. Silence, delays, and dry responses sent a message, even if no words did.

Setting boundaries does not make someone unkind. It protects time, effort, and peace of mind. Letting go of guilt often means recognizing patterns instead of hoping they change on their own.

Avoiding confrontation works temporarily, but clarity tends to bring longer relief. Honest expectations help everyone involved, even when they feel uncomfortable at first.

So what do you think? Would you have removed her sooner, or waited yet again for another response?

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%

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet is in charge of planning and content process management, business development, social media, strategic partnership relations, brand building, and PR for DailyHighlight. Before joining Dailyhighlight, she served as the Vice President of Editorial Development at Aubtu Today, and as a senior editor at various magazines and media agencies.

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