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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

It’s a Christmas one sorry! AIBU not inviting my in-laws to spend it with my family?

610 replies

OtterlyMad · 06/08/2025 21:24

Apologies I know Christmas is still bloody ages away but our parents start asking for our Christmas plans as soon as we make it past Easter (!) so we’re under pressure to let them know. I’ll try to keep it brief.

DH has a very small family: his mum and sister (both single and live alone on the opposite side of the country to us) plus a handful of extended family they only see at weddings and funerals.

By comparison, my family is big. It’s normal to be 12+ people for Christmas dinner. My siblings and I have small houses so my mum hosts every year (she has a 4-bed semi so not a mansion by any means) and she never complains but I feel guilty and wish we could host to take the pressure off her. Sadly it’s just not feasible until we upsize which won’t happen for another couple of years yet.

For the first few years of our relationship, DH and I always celebrated Christmas apart, with our respective families. Since we got married we’ve alternated which side we spend it with. This year it’s my family’s turn. But DH always feels bad whenever we don’t see his mum and sister since it’s just the two of them. This year, he suggested that we invite them to spend Christmas with my lot (obviously we would have to ask my mum first but I know she would agree because that’s the sort of person she is). However, I think it’s unfair to place any extra burden on my mum. DH says “it’s only two more people” but that’s on top of a dozen already. Plus my family are used to it being a tight squeeze - some of us end up sitting on the floor, and it’s all elbows at the dinner table - but we muddle through and have a laugh. Frankly I can’t imagine my quiet, reserved in-laws enjoying the ruckus and I wouldn’t be able to relax because I’d be worried the whole time that they were judging my very forward, loud and (probably) drunk family members!

I told DH no and we argued about it. He has accused me of disliking his family (not true), of being selfish (because his mum and sister have to spend the day “on their own” though I’ve pointed out they’re not on their own if they’re together!!) and “gatekeeping my family” (whatever that means). Am I being unreasonable by refusing to invite them?? I just want to continue with the current arrangement where we alternate each year.

P.S. In case anyone is wondering why we can’t split it (e.g. Christmas Day with one side and Boxing Day with the other) DH’s mum and sister live a 6hr+ drive away so it has to be all or nothing really.

OP posts:
MarchHairs · 09/08/2025 07:50

If I was ohs mum I would really value my nice quiet Xmas with my daughter. I would also value my xmases with my son and dil every other year. I would not expect or want an invitation to a family I know not very well, where I have to fall in line to their family traditions and tolerate their family dynamics.

If I was ops mum there is no way I would want two extra people there,12 is already too many. I would feel put out by being asked.

Op keep things as they are, perhaps invite dh mum and sister over on boxing day this year and have a nice celebration with them then

Superhansrantowindsor · 09/08/2025 07:54

We frequently travel 6plus hours to see family on Boxing Day. You should try to see both.
I think you should invite them. Tell them it will be chaos and let them decide.

MissScarletInTheBallroom · 09/08/2025 07:59

Superhansrantowindsor · 09/08/2025 07:54

We frequently travel 6plus hours to see family on Boxing Day. You should try to see both.
I think you should invite them. Tell them it will be chaos and let them decide.

The OP isn't hosting. It's not her house.

Do you really think she should be inviting them to someone else's house (that they barely know) for someone else to host, when there isn't room, and when they spend every other Christmas together?

Why?

Flatandhappy · 09/08/2025 08:25

I’m sure your mum is aware of the situation so she could have said “why don’t you invite them here if you want to” before now. She hasn’t so I don’t think it’s fair to ask her because she probably won’t want to say no. I am very “come all ye” but that’s easy when Christmas is in Summer and I have a big house and garden. I had to take turns for years when DH’s family and mine lived in different countries - I hated “their turn” but had to suck it up.

BadActingParsley · 09/08/2025 09:46

RosesAndHellebores · 06/08/2025 21:53

It isn't even Stevens like that in a marriage. You have yours close by all the time, he doesn't.

You and your family have loads of each other. Your MIL and SIL have just themselves.

I think you should be gracious and invite them. For all you know, they may find it overwhelming and decline the invitation next time.

To be honest, if ever it were to be just me and dd, we'd have a marvellous time and feast on smoked salmon, champagne and films.

I can see both sides op, but we have been there and done that and have grown up children. There are rods for backs of course but one day there won't be mothers at Christmas, it will just be you and your DH.

This is good sound advice. You do sound quite immature.

HopingForTheBest25 · 09/08/2025 16:25

I'm not seeing the immaturity tbh. There's nothing immature in considering it inappropriate to issue invitations to someone else's house. Or to want an agreement that the dh made to be adhered to.

I can't be doing with all this bollocks about how one day there won't be any mothers, only dh and the OP. My mum was about 70 when her mil died - it's a crap argument - any of us could die at any time. OP could be a widow before her own mil dies!

MissHollysDolly · 09/08/2025 16:45

OP, you’re in the right IMO. Especially as you’re not hosting. Once you do - invite who you want. But if your in laws come, won’t your brothers and sisters want to bring theirs?

godmum56 · 12/08/2025 16:43

WorcsEdu · 07/08/2025 15:15

😂Somehow who replies this way is the LAST person I’d be looking to for how to have a loving and magical Christmas!! Gosh please, even if you retort with another insult, have a private think about how kindness and coming together is at the heart of this. Being kind to one another genuinely makes you happier.

I soooo need the laugh emoji....have this instead

Fernhurst · 12/08/2025 17:58

godmum56 · 12/08/2025 16:43

I soooo need the laugh emoji....have this instead

Here it is 😂

godmum56 · 12/08/2025 18:07

Fernhurst · 12/08/2025 17:58

Here it is 😂

yes but its not in reactions any more 😪

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