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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

In-laws take our belongings

207 replies

TheAquaFawn · 04/01/2026 14:27

My MIL and SIL have a habit of taking our stuff and I wanted to get some perspective on it as it keeps happening.
If we lend them something they won’t return it and get very defensive if I see the item in their house and say ‘oh do you mind if I take that back I need it.’ If we ever leave something at their house by accident after we’ve visited they similarly won’t return the item without a lot of tension. I’ve asked my partner about it and he’s said maybe they see the item as theirs if it’s been left long enough. But this is only a matter of hours / days, weeks at most. I don’t understand it. The items are rarely expensive but things that we need and have a personal attachment to, including things for our baby. On other occasions it’s been more blatant where they’ve taken things of ours from our house ‘by accident’. I say it this way as it’s always the same things - for example my SIL takes the same two throws which end up back at their house being used in her bedroom. She’s taken them again for at least the third time.
My partner said that she had a problem with stealing as a child and would often take things from friends houses, including a hamster one time!
I’d appreciate any advice to address this or at least understand the psychology behind it.

OP posts:
UncannyFanny · 04/01/2026 18:39

Who cares about the psychology behind it. How the hell are you not noticing two enormous throws being removed from your house multiple times? Are you not being passive yourself with that?

MrsChristmasHasResigned · 04/01/2026 18:44

Is she someone who spends a lot of time seeing herself as the victim in life? If so, she may justify it to herself by saying you can afford it, have a better life than her, etc etc. Her mother obviously enables her and may even encourage her by backing her up when she sees herself as hard done by.

Bumblebeehee · 04/01/2026 18:45

Sounds frustrating. I would put your name on the label on some of the repeated items she takes so it can be easily seen as yours when you go around and therefore just take it back.

ShetlandishMum · 04/01/2026 18:45

I wouldn't invite them home and wouldn't visit them.

I would go to the coffee shop and see them outside homes.

Arran2024 · 04/01/2026 18:46

Some people take things belonging to other people as an attachment thing - they can't have you but they can have your throw. My nephew used to take our things and this was how it was explained to us by CAMHS. He wasn't stealing things he wanted as such - it was personal things of ours which he felt attached to because they mattered to us.

It's not easy to deal with. We were very open with him - we named what he was doing and tried to be vigilant but it's impossible with this sort of stealing as they will take literally anything, not obvious valuables.

Shellythesnail2333 · 04/01/2026 18:50

UncannyFanny · 04/01/2026 18:39

Who cares about the psychology behind it. How the hell are you not noticing two enormous throws being removed from your house multiple times? Are you not being passive yourself with that?

This!! Everyone sounds soooo passive!

Pricelessadvice · 04/01/2026 18:51

Do you not notice her leaving with things like the throws?
If so, I’d say loudly, “What are you doing with those throws SIL? They are mine and belong here.”

MissAmbrosia · 04/01/2026 18:51

They just would never be invited again.

Strawberrydelight78 · 04/01/2026 18:59

They would be getting banned from my house weirdos.

Gettingfitorbust · 04/01/2026 19:07

What about buying her a similar throw so she can have her own?

WearyAuldWumman · 04/01/2026 19:10

Gettingfitorbust · 04/01/2026 19:07

What about buying her a similar throw so she can have her own?

More than the throw is being taken - and there's no point in rewarding stealing.

Pomegranatecarnage · 04/01/2026 19:16

I would ban them from my house. There’s no justification for theft. That’s awful behaviour!

ASongOfRiceAndPeas · 04/01/2026 19:22

Navybluecoat · 04/01/2026 17:59

This was my mother

Shes a rich narcissist and I was a skint single mum

If she took a liking to something,she'd just take it

Her attitude was 'I want that so I'm having It'

If you called her out on it,you'd get the (fake) tears and the wailing about how 'you buy better brands than I do'

If you pushed it and involved other people,she'd lie and twist things to make her look good and you in the wrong

It got to the point I was having to frisk her everytime she got past my front door-so she started getting my dc to pass things onto her

I solved it by going nc and anything I buy now doesn't grow legs and walk out of the house

Oh wow, this is exactly how my mum is with me too. She’s not rich but in a much better position than me as a single parent. Gets super angry and turns it on you when you ask for your belongings back, so in the end it becomes to awkward to even ask. Top manipulator and narcissistic.

MeridianB · 04/01/2026 19:23

Agree it’s theft and is totally unacceptable. Either they cannot be left alone at any time in your home or stop having them over.

I suspect he has few friends if she does this to them. Does she work?

Sounds like psychiatric help is in order.

pinkyredrose · 04/01/2026 19:32

climbintheback · 04/01/2026 17:28

Wrap up one throw for her birthday the other for Christmas - imagine the look on her face when she opens it!

Wrap one up for a pressie, nick it back then wrap it up and give it to her again!

ohyesido · 04/01/2026 19:32

Must be some weird king of the heap game. How is she getting access to steal the same thing 3 times?

PS5Gamer · 04/01/2026 19:34

I wouldn’t be arsed about the psychology of their thieving. I would not allow them in my home anymore.

Maneattraction · 04/01/2026 19:35

Something similar here - they are known as ‘the borrowers’.

Parsleyforme · 04/01/2026 19:39

What kind of things for your baby? Do you leave them there or do they take them from your house? Well I wouldn’t be inviting them round anymore and I’d make absolute sure I’ve got everything before I left. Now you know your SIL has form for stealing things - a hamster??! - and she never gets pulled up on it, you know your stuff isn’t safe and she’s got kleptomaniac issues. Some families are very “what’s mine is yours” but it doesn’t really sound like that’s the case here because she’s getting funny over baby things

DoneWithMen · 04/01/2026 19:39

Sausagescanfly · 04/01/2026 14:40

If they can't stop stealing hour stuff, then they shouldn't be allowed in your house. It's a natural consequence.

Either that or you frisk them on the way out. I'm sure that would be fun all round.

😂🤣😂

Coco64 · 04/01/2026 19:40

I think it is a form of control but you need to call it out no question - It is all about boundaries and it is doing it with a firm but determined manner. You do need back up from your partner though,

Don't buy them any birthday presents or Christmas presents - they have already taken things from your house they wanted

It is totally out of order

OneFineDay22 · 04/01/2026 19:45

My MIL takes things (including my things) simply because she feels entitled to them. She has a strange way of seeing things and always feels that she has done something towards other people’s homes or situations (even though she never ever has) so she’s entitled to repayment by taking things without asking. She does it at cafes as well and other places and I think the reasoning there is “I have paid money into this place so I can take their teapot”.

She will “help” someone move house (by standing around telling them where they should put their furniture, including arguing with them if they want it somewhere else), never lift an actual finger, and then help herself to their property to pay herself back for this “help”.

She has not been allowed in my home for several years now as my DH got sick of her attitude of “what’s yours is mine”.

JillyGiraffe · 04/01/2026 19:52

TomatoSandwiches · 04/01/2026 14:42

I'd start doing pat downs when they leave the house or start taking random yet annoying items from theres like remote controls and dishwasher tablets.

Remote controls is brilliant!
Or maybe make it obvious when you go to theirs - pick something up in front of them and put it in your bag!

godmum56 · 04/01/2026 20:03

ASongOfRiceAndPeas · 04/01/2026 19:22

Oh wow, this is exactly how my mum is with me too. She’s not rich but in a much better position than me as a single parent. Gets super angry and turns it on you when you ask for your belongings back, so in the end it becomes to awkward to even ask. Top manipulator and narcissistic.

no it does not become too awkward to ask. Why would you tolerate it?

Navybluecoat · 04/01/2026 20:14

godmum56 · 04/01/2026 20:03

no it does not become too awkward to ask. Why would you tolerate it?

It's very hard to explain

It seems that both our mothers are narcissists-they can twist everything to the point the truth is a distant dot

It becomes emotionally draining trying to keep up so you give up (which is what they want)

It's a win-win for them-your the bad guy and they keep their stolen goodies with no guilt as in their heads,they've done nothing wrong