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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:
Ilovelifeverymuch · 17/11/2025 17:49

BillieWiper · 17/11/2025 12:04

You sound like you don't really like her or approve of anything about her character or parenting. Which could well be perfectly reasonable of you.

If I really liked someone I could probably accept that they were broke and that's the only way they felt they could do a party.

But if she seems really grabby and entitled then you should just give her a wide berth.

How broke do you have to be to insist only family eat the birthday cake???

Sorry she just being tightfisted and cheap.

LadeOde · 17/11/2025 17:49

People are just strange.

Candystripes85 · 17/11/2025 17:49

Bananaandmangosmoothie · 17/11/2025 17:04

We have friends like this. It’s always the wealthier ones in the friendship group!

That’s probably why they are wealthy and the rest of us aren’t - they don’t part with their cash. My husband always jokes about my friend and says the above. I think he’s probably right.

OP posts:
Blueskystoday · 17/11/2025 17:49

I honestly cannot imagine how anyone would be friends with someone like that.
It reflects poorly on you that someone like that is someone you want to be around.
People like that are judged and avoided, hence people declining.

Acg1991 · 17/11/2025 17:50

Also, well done to you for being brave enough to say it! I'm sure she was probably just a bit embarrassed by being called out and will forgive you very soon. And hopefully she will have taken what you've said on board!

Blondeshavemorefun · 17/11/2025 17:52

Poor kids. ? She doesn’t buy them anything for bday or xmas as other people buy for them ?

she is a tightarse

you organise a party. You pay for it esp for kids

SezFrankly · 17/11/2025 17:53

moto748e · 17/11/2025 17:34

I got as far as

plus I know she doesn’t buy her kids any presents for Christmas and birthdays as friends and family will buy them

Whaaat?!

^^

Exactly. I once discovered a friend of mine spent around £10 each on her kids at Xmas bc her family would be spending on them.

I stopped buying £20-30 presents straightaway!

ArtTheClownIsNotAMime · 17/11/2025 17:55

Another MNer with a "friend" she can't stand.

SpinningaCompass · 17/11/2025 17:55

She's not 'lovely' where money isn't involved. She's an entitled user and a thief. She's stealing from her friends, her family, her children's friends essentially. How you can't see that is baffling.

Daughterofthesea · 17/11/2025 17:56

Her poor kids.
They will resent her when they look back on this later in life.
Nothing worse than growing up with tight, stingy parents.
Parties need not cost the earth, even if you are poor which you said she isn’t.

I’d be calling her out on all the behaviours you’ve mentioned in the hope it might be a much needed wake up call.
I’d not want to continue to be friends with a CF of this degree to be honest.
She sounds like a horribly selfish and entitled cheapskate.

Candystripes85 · 17/11/2025 17:56

Givethegift · 17/11/2025 17:08

But oddly enough she’s been doing it for the past 7 years with multiple children

Edited

Her 7 year old is the oldest child and only 1 school friend has said they are attending this year - they haven’t booked yet as I can see the amount of people who have and so far it’s my 1 child and my friends 3. She’s only really been getting away with it since her DC started school. The other 4 years were from family and friends who feel obligated to go. I was talking about school friends specifically here, as she attends their parties and takes but doesn’t reciprocate and this year no one is coming. Next year I can’t imagine anyone coming from school and her DC may not be invited to their parties either.

OP posts:
Candystripes85 · 17/11/2025 17:57

Hons123 · 17/11/2025 17:09

Awful. As awful as 'wedding lists' registered at big shops. As crazy as a bar at a wedding for which guests have to pay. Crazy, rude and grasping. If you can't afford to pay for a wedding/birthday party, don't expect others to pay for it. Actually, same as inviting people on stag dos and hen dos in foreign jurisdictions and expecting people to pay for tickets, hotels, etc. Awful.

Don’t get me started on expensive hen dos!

OP posts:
NewsdeskJC · 17/11/2025 17:58

Its madness.
Growing up i had friends who were part of large families. One had the deal that each child had a 5th Birthday Party and a 10th Birthday Party. The other years they still got presents, a family birthday tea and cake. They all seemed happy with it.
Surely better than what she is trying to do.

Candystripes85 · 17/11/2025 18:04

willowthecat · 17/11/2025 17:16

How strange ! Does she expect presents ?

She’s hasn’t specifically asked for presents on the invite but I’ve never seen anyone that ever does that. For a kids party I think it’s just expected you will take the kid a present. If she didn’t want any, I would have expected to see something on the invite to say so.

I know her really well so I can categorically tell you that she 100% is expecting presents for her DC.

OP posts:
feebeecat · 17/11/2025 18:08

I have one the same, although we are now way past the party stage, thank god.
She used to go one better with the presents though. She would ‘stock up’ during sales, then send out the child is into x,y,z list, along with a very helpful “I’ve already got this if you want to have it to send from you?” And then charge full price!! So not only was child getting something (she) wanted, she was making a profit on it!!
Never holds back with spending on herself though 🙄

stichguru · 17/11/2025 18:08

Nope if you can't pay for a party, or don't want to, then your child doesn't get a party. End of. The only exception might be if you were doing something truly expensive for a very few children, and it was something you'd discussed with them and their parents (who you knew) and decided that the parents wanted to pay for their children to have an awesome experience. Like a theme park with 3 best buddies or something.

Climbingrosexx · 17/11/2025 18:10

Sorry to say this but she sounds like a dreadful person who is very lucky to have such a good friend in you. You can't be sending people links to book and pay for entry to soft play and call it a party. As for turning up at parties with siblings etc!
I'm a bit lost for words to be honest but YANBU

Sassylovesbooks · 17/11/2025 18:19

You don't invite children to a 'party', where there's no food, cake, party bags and then expect parents to pay!! I agree, it's not a party at all, it's a playdate. I'd expect to pay myself if my child was invited to a playdate, but not a party. There's a difference between a playdate and a party. Your friend is being tightfisted and then is wondering why no one wants to attend!!

Brainstorm23 · 17/11/2025 18:21

Massive CF territory. If you are so tight you don't want to actually host a party then at least bundle it with with a few other kids to reduce costs. In a big class they'll always be a few birthdays each month.

In my daughter's class we're going to a party for 4 kids all together which I don't object to as it saves us all wasting 4 Saturdays at four different parties.

My local leisure centre does a laser quest party for £155 for up to 24 kids so while not exactly cheap if you split between 2 or 3 it's more than affordable if she's actually quite well off. Add in a cake for £15-20 and some pizzas and squash and it's not like it costs the earth.

Those poor kids. You can guarantee she's been marked out as one of "those parents" by the rest of the class and in a few years all the kids will know all about her from their parents.

RisingSunn · 17/11/2025 18:22

I actually stopped exchanging gifts with her a few years ago when my DC received a present for his birthday that I bought for her DC at Christmas.

😩😂😂

Butchyrestingface · 17/11/2025 18:27

Candystripes85 · 17/11/2025 12:10

@BillieWiper I agree my post has come across that way, but I do genuinely like her as a friend. She’s not broke, just tight there’s a difference. I could give you a whole list of her other ‘habits’ but that could easily be its own seperate thread.

Edited

Why do you like someone so lacking in a moral compass?

Its unfathomable.

Bookishworms · 17/11/2025 18:29

Moonlightdust · 17/11/2025 17:16

Wow this is shocking! Sounds like a scene from Motherland! 😂😂😂

It was. The empty room was a school sports hall she’d got free. But she didn’t book an entertainer or arrange games. She just had a single football and said the kids could just ‘run around’. This was a fourth birthday so they weren’t able to organise themselves into groups or anything so just wandered around bored and confused! It was awful!

Fantomfartflinger · 17/11/2025 18:36

I could not be friends with this kind of person and I wouldn’t be bothered about her children. The children will find out soon enough they their mother is an embarrassment socially.

It is selfishness. The cake she will not share, dinner she basically steals the tip, throws a party and will get presents from attendees but they’ve also paid their entry.

Very low behaviour. Notice how she got angry when you pointed it out. Nasty.

You can celebrate a birthday at home with a couple of best friends and a cake or go to the cinema and a pizza.

Hoorayyou · 17/11/2025 18:38

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines.

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 17/11/2025 18:39

Blueskystoday · 17/11/2025 17:49

I honestly cannot imagine how anyone would be friends with someone like that.
It reflects poorly on you that someone like that is someone you want to be around.
People like that are judged and avoided, hence people declining.

Ah yes, OP. This is all your fault.

It always is on MN sooner or later.