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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Husband afraid of DIY

337 replies

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 09:42

My Dad is a builder and my ex was too, so I've been around men who are handy all my life. I'm not very handy myself because I lack confidence, but I understand enough of the landscape to know when we need to get a trade in, or when we can do it ourselves.

My husband is a polymath, one of the most intelligent people I know, can learn and do anything he puts his mind to, but has always rented properties before we met and so had a landlord maintaining things for him.

I am the main earner in the house and work more than full time, he works between 2.5 and 4 days a week. I take responsibility for the house and garden, and my son from a previous marriage, and all the animals. He cooks twice a week and does the laundry. We have a cleaner.

All this is context for a real bone of contention between us at the moment. He won't get involved in home maintenance. On any level.

We had a leak in the upstairs bathroom recently that took the power out in the room beneath it. Once the leak had been sorted by a plumber and the room below had been dried out with a dehumidifier, I asked him to find an electrician to come and get the power back online. This was during a period when I was making redundancies at work, it was hideous and very stressful. My husband just didn't. I kept asking and he kept saying the room needs to dry, and I was like, it is dry. I've had the dehumidifier on, you can feel it's dry, it needs looking at. Weeks went by and I ended up sorting it myself.

Our washing machine stank and was full of mould. I asked him to empty the filter and clean it out when he had a minute, he said it wasn't that, there's something wrong with the pipes, we need to get a man in. I said we can't a man in until we've gone through basic maintenance. He lost his temper and said that his mum 'never once cleaned her washing machine filter', that's not a thing, it's not for homeowners to do. I pointed out that we're meant to do it every 2 months. He said that just isn't true. I cleared the filter myself, got all the mould out, nothing smells now.

Our dishwasher recently started not cleaning things properly. I googled and it said to clean the filter and spray arm as first action. I asked him to do that. He said he has no idea how, he's not a dishwasher repairman. I said that Google is his friend. He said he doesn't know the model. I said it's on the sticker. Long story short, it stopped draining completely because he did nothing. I googled for a plan of attack; he was adamant we needed a repairman. The outlet hose just needed clearing. I did it. These solutions are easy to find online.

And now we having the bathroom and windows replaced. I am fine that I have had to co-ordinate it all, line up all the trades, whatever. I AM better placed to do that. I do know more than him. Fine. But the builder is in today and I have a busy day on and we need some materials that I'd told the builder we already had, but we don't. So I just asked my husband if he'd go to the builder's yard to get some blocks and he had another meltdown. He hates going there, hates the feeling that they know more than he does...

I don't mind at all that he can't build a house himself. But he can teach himself anything when he wants to, and has said many times he finds DIY boring and it's not something he's interested in doing.

Me either. I had zero interest in how dishwashers work, washing machine filters, electricians... None. I don't figure out how things work because it's my life passion, nor do I go into technical detail. I just look online for 2-minute YouTube explainers and if it's simple, do it, and if it's hard, ring someone. Like a normal fucking adult.

It's really starting to make me cross. I'm not his landlord or his mother, and every damn thing in this house is my responsibility. Fine. But I can't even delegate simple things, and his reaction to requests is strange and OTT. He panics and gets defensive and then turns it around on me: normal people get repairmen in. Not to clean the bastard dishwasher filter they don't. If he's worried about being emasculated and embarrassed by people that know more than him, THAT would be more embarrassing. Getting the Hotpoint man out to empty sweetcorn.

He thinks I'm being really unreasonable and says there are other things he's suited to doing. But I'm at a loss to figure out what, because it isn't gardening, decorating, sorting cupboards out that need sorting, helping his stepson...

This is making me mad.

OP posts:
Littlejellyuk · 16/07/2025 09:46

My husband is similar. Is crap at DIY. So his solution was to work extra shifts so he could pay for a tradesman to sort it. He is awful at DIY, and makes sense to pay for a tradesman to sort it properly.
DH would rather work extra to pay for it, so everyone wins.
It works for us. But it's not to everyone's liking.
I felt fed up of being a receptionist in my own home, so we sat down and went through delegating household tasks etc.
We also split chores and cooking, or else resentment breeds.

Edited to say: I hope you are okay.

DownsideUpside · 16/07/2025 09:50

I have voted yabu because I don’t understand why you keep asking him to do these things. If you’re able to Google the issue and repair it, or contact the tradespeople yourself, then just do it yourself.
He must pick up an alternative chore off your plate in return. But it sounds like he is bad at all tasks so you have my sympathy tbh. We end up taking on all the responsibility and that’s not fair. Worth a conversation, he needs to step up.

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 09:52

Littlejellyuk · 16/07/2025 09:46

My husband is similar. Is crap at DIY. So his solution was to work extra shifts so he could pay for a tradesman to sort it. He is awful at DIY, and makes sense to pay for a tradesman to sort it properly.
DH would rather work extra to pay for it, so everyone wins.
It works for us. But it's not to everyone's liking.
I felt fed up of being a receptionist in my own home, so we sat down and went through delegating household tasks etc.
We also split chores and cooking, or else resentment breeds.

Edited to say: I hope you are okay.

Edited

I don't mind paying for tradesmen myself when we need them. I do earn more money. It's all good.

But it's the things we don't need trades for that are grating on me. The first thing I do if something breaks is look in its manual and then online. 9 times out of 10, it's something we should have been doing but haven't, or can do. Fine.

The thing he does if something breaks is want to throw money at it - replace it, get someone in to fix it. I would be too embarrassed to book a repair person before doing the basic stuff we are supposed to do. And while I have no problem spending money on trades when we need to, I resent how freely he will spend it rather than just engage his extremely very capable brain. He works in IT, he's logical and methodical, very dextrous with his hands, and his Google works. It really frustrates me that he won't engage with troubleshooting.

But even if we did as you do, he is still afraid of speaking to tradesmen. It's like he imagines they expect him to be able to tell them what's wrong. I have no idea what the block was to him ringing the electrician and saying, we have no power in our downstairs loo after a leak. It's been sorted - can you come and take a look?

OP posts:
Bloozie · 16/07/2025 09:54

DownsideUpside · 16/07/2025 09:50

I have voted yabu because I don’t understand why you keep asking him to do these things. If you’re able to Google the issue and repair it, or contact the tradespeople yourself, then just do it yourself.
He must pick up an alternative chore off your plate in return. But it sounds like he is bad at all tasks so you have my sympathy tbh. We end up taking on all the responsibility and that’s not fair. Worth a conversation, he needs to step up.

Edited

Yeah, that's fair enough. Except he doesn't want any of the other chores off my plate either. I'm better with the animals, he's not interested in gardening, he wasn't put on this earth to spend his weekend doing chores, he claims not to notice leaves that need sweeping, cat sick that needs sorting, women's eyes work differently, we evolved to hunt berries and see little things, men see the bigger picture...

It fair drives me mad.

OP posts:
parietal · 16/07/2025 09:55

If he wants to get in trades, let him organise it and pay for it. If he wants to pay someone £100 to clean the dishwasher filter instead of doing it himself, let him.

I know that seems silly but it is better than arguing about it.

TenderChicken · 16/07/2025 09:56

He kind of sounds like a dick who thinks he's above everyone else, tbh.

AnotherEmma · 16/07/2025 09:56

What does he bring to the relationship, then?
I would forgive his complete lack of interest in home maintenance if he did other things, but he doesn't.
I'd get rid of him tbh. The resentment will just kill any love and respect you do have.

Snorlaxo · 16/07/2025 09:58

I am afraid of DIY but would rather do the stuff like clean out the dishwasher myself rather than pay a plumber to do it for me. As you say it’s often stuff that I should have been doing in the first place.

My YouTube search history is full of “How to…” videos and I bet that’s the same for many. It’s easy to jump to call a tradesmen when it’s not your money and time. I watch the how to videos even when I end up calling a professional so that I have an idea of how long the job will take and how much extra in parts. Even if he never does it himself, it’s surprising that someone who is normally intellectually curious, won’t attempt things like cleaning dishwasher filters which are designed so that non professionals can do it.

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 09:59

Have I understood correctly? DIY is the sole domain of the husband? He's not a 'useful' husband if DIY is not part of his skill set?

I have said YAB(V)U. You don't want to pay someone to be a plumber, electrician, putter-upper, decorator ...? Learn for yourself how to do it! If he's interested, learn together how to do it.

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 10:01

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 09:59

Have I understood correctly? DIY is the sole domain of the husband? He's not a 'useful' husband if DIY is not part of his skill set?

I have said YAB(V)U. You don't want to pay someone to be a plumber, electrician, putter-upper, decorator ...? Learn for yourself how to do it! If he's interested, learn together how to do it.

Edited

Not at all. I just don't think it should be the sole preserve of me, either. We're partners.

OP posts:
BusMumsHoliday · 16/07/2025 10:02

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 09:54

Yeah, that's fair enough. Except he doesn't want any of the other chores off my plate either. I'm better with the animals, he's not interested in gardening, he wasn't put on this earth to spend his weekend doing chores, he claims not to notice leaves that need sweeping, cat sick that needs sorting, women's eyes work differently, we evolved to hunt berries and see little things, men see the bigger picture...

It fair drives me mad.

If he's genuinely spouting that sexist evolutionary psych rubbish, you need to leave him. Your DS is hearing that.

Will he call in people to fix problems? If so, let him do that. If the repairman tells him it's a basic problem he could fix himself, then he's learnt something. But if he's refusing to do that, then there's a problem.

The bigger issues is him refusing to take on a share of any household tasks and giving crap reasons why. I would very much guess he is not going to change and you should proceed on that basis.

330ml · 16/07/2025 10:02

parietal · 16/07/2025 09:55

If he wants to get in trades, let him organise it and pay for it. If he wants to pay someone £100 to clean the dishwasher filter instead of doing it himself, let him.

I know that seems silly but it is better than arguing about it.

That would annoy me. I would regard it as a waste of £100 for a simple job virtually any adult (or child) could do.

NotDavidTennant · 16/07/2025 10:03

He's not afraid of DIY. He's just lazy and would rather pay someone to fix a problem or, even better, leave it for you to sort out.

Devilsmommy · 16/07/2025 10:04

Sounds like he feels emasculated when he has to call on a tradie but obviously hates it because he's extremely clever. Men are stupid that way, like being unable to do DIY means you're less of a man or something as daft as that. Not even calling them is ridiculous though, he needs to see just how much resentment he's causing so he realises just how annoyed you're getting

Bearbookagainandagain · 16/07/2025 10:06

I was ready to say YABU based on your title, but that's not "DIY", that's basic household maintenance!
I'm rubbish at those things and do rely on my husband to maintain appliances, but if he can't do it I'd just google and get stuck in. And anyone is able to shop with a list or call an electrician in.

It feels more like he is lazy and doesn't want to make any effort. What does he do the rest of the time when he works 2.5 days?!

NaiceBalonz · 16/07/2025 10:06

It sounds like a combination of other men in your life being handy and him having no clue how to do X makes him feel emasculated, and the only thing more emasculating than that is admitting it.

ZippyPeer · 16/07/2025 10:07

I mean I understand feeling out of your depth with some things like this if you have never really done them, particularly in an area which is traditionally associated with men, so extra emotional stress around masculinity.

But.

Come on how hard is it to watch a YouTube video and give it a go? Not hard which means he is either a) lazy b) has a deep seated emotional issue with it, in which case something like cognitive behavioural therapy might be needed... I don't think his stance of 'i can't do it ' is fair or reasonable, he's got to try to get past it (or take on a significant area of household responsibility instead)

TheOtherAgentJohnson · 16/07/2025 10:09

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 10:01

Not at all. I just don't think it should be the sole preserve of me, either. We're partners.

Are you partners? It doesn't sound like it. You're absolutely in the right, but he's not going to change, so you're just going to become more and more bitter about how useless he is. Why bother?

CanOfMangoTango · 16/07/2025 10:14

he's not interested in gardening, he wasn't put on this earth to spend his weekend doing chores, he claims not to notice leaves that need sweeping, cat sick that needs sorting, women's eyes work differently, we evolved to hunt berries and see little things, men see the bigger picture...

Doing stuff you don't really want to do or are not remotely interested in doing is part of being an adult.

I don't enjoy gardening, it's outdoor housework to me. But I do it because I don't want to live in an eyesore.

Does he understand that you don't enjoy these jobs either? If so, what makes him so special? You earn more, work more, organise more.

What is the point of him? What does he bring to day to day life?

FirstNationsEnglish · 16/07/2025 10:14

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 10:01

Not at all. I just don't think it should be the sole preserve of me, either. We're partners.

@Bloozie It fair drives me mad.

His brain works differently to yours. His skill set is different to yours. His approach is different to yours. If you are a partnership, you negotiate, each should be flexible but one cannot impose how they think things 'should be' onto the other.

It is more important to you that you DIY, and he is happy to pay for the talents and interests that are not his. There are more important things to be concerned about, although I 'get it' that you are irritated. Sorry, I still think you are being slight unreasonable in dumping onto him your irritation and criticising his 'lack' in practical matters. It just does not light his fire, and that is fair enough.

TheCurious0range · 16/07/2025 10:14

Most of these things are not trades, cleaning the washing machine filter, cleaning the dishwasher spray arm, contacting an electrician, run out to b&q and pick up a few bits the builder needs. The OP isn't asking him to be a tradesman, but he works part time, she full time, he also doesn't do other household jobs, gardening, cleaning, cooking etc so what? She should work full time, do all of the general chores, the garden, the minor household maintenance cleaning jobs, cook the meals, pay the bills while he sits at home most of the week and does nothing?! People are crazy. What is he adding?

IfNot · 16/07/2025 10:14

I don’t even think DIY/ maintenance is the issue. He’s not interested in being a decent step father to your son. That’s going to fuck the kid up. Your son also sees a mum doing everything ( why does he only cook twice a week??) and a man doing bugger all. Great role model there.
I would admit my mistake and divorce him ( and I genuinely mean that because I’ve had my fill of substandard lazy men) but it’s up to you.

MyCyanReader · 16/07/2025 10:16

He clearly hates DIY and maintenance tasks so why are you continuing to force them on him?

If it's his lack of working hours and money he is bringing in, then ask him to do more hours.

You're meant to work as a team - strengths and weaknesses.

If it's not working as a couple then go your separate ways.

Bloozie · 16/07/2025 10:20

MyCyanReader · 16/07/2025 10:16

He clearly hates DIY and maintenance tasks so why are you continuing to force them on him?

If it's his lack of working hours and money he is bringing in, then ask him to do more hours.

You're meant to work as a team - strengths and weaknesses.

If it's not working as a couple then go your separate ways.

Because I hate them too. Who loves cleaning the dishwasher filter? Or going down to B&Q? It's just shit that needs doing.

It's not about the money he is bringing in, it's about how we use our time. I would like free time too.

OP posts:
Sunwarddangledhardens · 16/07/2025 10:24

I once had a tenant who called me out to bleed the radiators. I offered to show him how to do it for next time (saving him and me time and trouble) and he flat out refused because it was my responsibility. It was, but that's a mini-life skill he'd failed to acquire by standing on his rights. I think some renters become infantilised by not having responsibility for repairs and proactive maintenance, not helped if they don't have an interest or aptitude of course. No excuse for not having a solution though, that's the adult ask. Either he learns to do it or he proposes how you're going to rebalance responsibilities if you have to pick it up as an extra.