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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Paying to attend a kids party?

252 replies

Candystripes85 · 17/11/2025 11:51

My friend fell out with me over the weekend because I said to her that the reason there aren’t many children coming to her DC’s “party” is most likely because she’s expecting people to pay for their kids to attend.

She’s throwing her DC a “party” at a soft play centre and has sent a link for everybody to book their own child on. I put it in inverted commas because she hasn’t hired the party room, there is no food, no cake. It’s just turn up and hope you find a seat, so not really a party at all, more of a play date. After sending the link on the party group, 2 other parents dropped out with excuses saying they forgot they had something else planned. This is what prompted my conversation with her as she was annoyed. She is now left with 1 school friend attending and the rest (not many) are her friend’s children who are coming mainly out of obligation. Even her DC’s cousins aren’t going.

I’ve personally thrown parties at soft plays before and they are complete rip-off so I’m not judging her for not paying for the party package, but I said to her at the very least she could’ve paid for the entry into the soft play for the kids she’s invited. After all, it is still considerably cheaper than what they charge for the parties and also cheaper than if she hired a hall with a bouncy castle etc. This isn’t the first time this has happened, her DC is 7 so it’s been going on along time now. Every year she has a professional birthday cake made, but only family are allowed to eat it so that won’t be coming, no other food will be there, no party bags or thank you’s for the kids who do attend and presents are still expected for the birthday child (there is no mention of not bringing one on the invite and it would be awkward for someone to ask, plus I know she doesn’t buy her kids any presents for Christmas and birthdays as friends and family will buy them). Am I the only one who can understand why people aren’t coming?

For context she has multiple children and she will quite happily attend everyone else’s birthday parties dragging the younger siblings along, allowing them to join in with the all activities and eat the food/cake without paying a single penny towards anything. She’s pretty shameless and will even take home a ‘doggy bag’ if there is a buffet, anything she can get for free she takes. However in return she’s not willing to do the same, which I feel is likely the reason she’s had so many declines. If she wasn’t a good friend of mine, and I wasn’t that close to her DC I would have declined myself, because I think it’s really quite rude. Im taking my child because I feel sorry for her DC, it’s not their fault they have tight parents and I want to make sure they have some other kids there to celebrate with them.

I will just add that this has nothing to do with financial hardship. The friend in question is a very good friend of mine so I know her and her husband very well, and she is in general unfortunately just a bit of a cheapskate (not frugal, there’s a difference). Her whole family are that way so it’s just the way she’s been bought up. I can look past it because I value our friendship more, but I can understand why people she doesn’t know that well would feel put out by it. I don’t think she understands how other people may perceive her when she will happily take (sometimes a lot) from other people but won’t reciprocate.

Anyway, I seem to have really upset her with what I said so wanted to get some opinions on whether I was unreasonable for saying it?

OP posts:
CluelessAboutBiology · 23/11/2025 11:58

Candystripes85 · 17/11/2025 20:04

I have and it’s the reason I very very rarely go out for dinner with her anymore. The first few times we didn’t realise what was going on as she always paid last and would never specify how much she wanted to pay , she would just say ‘I’ll pay whatever is left’, then obviously you sometimes get the screens where you have to click yes for a tip and type the amount in, so we just presumed she was doing that but she was actually just putting her pin in. The time I caught her and said something, I was sitting right next to her at the table and saw what the waitress typed into the card machine and then I realised what she was up too.

I had a friend I suspected was doing that, as she used to complain I was “over generous” with tips. She said 10% was the absolute maximum we should be tipping. (We only go to cheap places where we rarely spend more than £25/£30 per head, so 10% is only a couple of quid)

Now when the waiter/ress brings the card machine over I tell them loudly “£X each please”, to make sure the staff get their tips.

CF friend is mortgage free, the rest of the group isn’t.

Branleuse · 23/11/2025 22:34

Candystripes85 · 17/11/2025 12:37

The thing is she’s done it for 7 years already so to her, why would this year be any different. I think if people had declined the first time, she might have got the hint. I’m probably enabling her in all honesty, but I can’t bear the thought of her children being sad if we don’t go. I have to remind myself, it’s not their fault.

The child is only 7 so year 2 or 3?
I think that school parents wont go along with this in the same way as family and friends might.

I think you were right to say what you said. Tell her that she's a tight arsed cheapskate and that it's starting to be an issue

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