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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Daughter half moved out - what about her bedroom?

195 replies

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 01:30

My daughter has been in a committed relationship for over a year and, during that time, has unofficially moved in with her partner. Initially she stayed at home once a week, then gradually less and less, and this pattern has been consistent for a year. Over time she has moved all of her belongings to his home, to the point that when she does stay here now she has to bring a large amount with her, even for a single night.

She works part-time and is actively seeking full-time employment now that she has completed her college course. I do not receive any financial contribution for her and I want to be clear that this is not a financial grievance at all.

I have four other children living at home. I share with my two younger disabled children under ten, and my two older boys aged nineteen and fourteen also share. As the only girl, my daughter has always had the smaller bedroom to herself.

She stayed over last night and became very upset that her fourteen-year-old brother had slept in her room. He struggles with disrupted sleep because his nineteen-year-old brother works irregular hours and disturbs him when coming and going, so I allowed him to use her room as a sleep space when she isn’t here. This was discussed with her and she agreed in principle. However, she still becomes upset if the bed hasn’t been remade or if he hasn’t removed the items he uses to sleep before she returns.

I am very conscious of not wanting to make her feel displaced or unwanted. When I moved out with my boyfriend as a young adult, my own mother was extremely firm and immediately gave my bedroom to a younger sibling. She told me that adult choices come with adult consequences and that the family home couldn’t be treated like a hotel. At the time I felt this was harsh, but I can now understand her perspective — while still wanting to hold space for my daughter’s emotional needs in a gentler way.

My dilemma is this: what if her relationship doesn’t work out and she needs to come home? Should her room be preserved for her indefinitely in case that happens? How long is it reasonable to wait before reallocating her bedroom to one of her siblings when we are already overcrowded? Or should I avoid doing that altogether?

I ask for kindness when reading this, for me and for her, particularly regarding our living situation. We have all had a very difficult journey, and none of this is by choice or due to careless decisions. I previously part-owned a suitably sized home, but I was subjected to severe domestic abuse and had to flee with my children into refuge accommodation. I lost everything when I left, as the property was in his name, and we were subsequently rehoused by the local authority. That history shapes many of the decisions I am trying to navigate now.

OP posts:
pilates · 09/01/2026 06:20

The two older boys should have a room each. I would just say your son gets her room but if your daughter’s relationship fails then she would get her room back.

Zanatdy · 09/01/2026 06:21

As she is still under 18, i’d keep her room for her but tell her you can’t do that indefinitely when she’s moved out. If she returns home, then you can make the dining room her bedroom.

SomewhatAnnoyed · 09/01/2026 06:42

I think everyone needs a reality check here.

If she’s moved out it’s ridiculous of her to expect to keep her old room, particularly when her brothers are sharing with a 5 year age gap and don’t sleep at the same time and her own mother is sharing with two younger siblings every night - she is acting like a princess.

If she was away at uni that would be slightly different bc in the holidays she would expect to return, but even then, your day to day living conditions and that of your FOUR other children should take precedent.

You sound like a very caring mother but think of your other children. Why is she more important than her brothers? If she wants to visit then your 14 year old could move back into his old shared room for a night or 2 maybe, or she could (shock horror!) sleep in your living room.

If her relationship breaks up then you can cross that bridge then but it sounds crazy to keep her old room as a shrine and empty when there are children there who desperately need it themselves. Your accommodation isn’t your fault and if you lived in a mansion it would of course be different, but you don’t and she is fully aware of your circumstances so she just has to accept the situation you’re all in and be grateful she gets to live in a place where she’s presumably just sharing with her bf.

If she kicks off she’s being selfish. If she’s old enough to move in with a bf she’s old enough to acknowledge the need for her siblings to use whatever space they can. She presumably cares about their and your welfare so she has no excuse to get arsey about it when she spends the majority of the time elsewhere. Don’t pick favourites just bc she’s the only girl, OP. That’s what it will look like you’re doing. It’s not HER room, it’s one of the rooms available for your whole family to use who live there. She doesn’t live there.

SomewhatAnnoyed · 09/01/2026 06:44

rainandshine38 · 09/01/2026 06:19

I’m sorry but there she is with two bedrooms and two houses and there you all are with a tiny overcrowded house. She needs a reality check! You can say you are there for her and there will always be a roof for her but right now you are all struggling and need that room.

Exactly this

Lemons1571 · 09/01/2026 06:47

Has she officially moved out? Changed her address with workplace, banks etc? I would be concerned - has an official move been discussed agreed with the boyfriend’s mother? Or is this one of those “drift” situations, where you could find the boyfriend’s mother gets fed up and suddenly calls a halt to the extra person?

Whyherewego · 09/01/2026 06:48

Why don't you say to DD that her room can be the dining room ? So then recruit her to help clear it up? Then the 14 Yr old gets her current room and you solve a problem?

SomewhatAnnoyed · 09/01/2026 06:48

ZenZazie · 09/01/2026 03:21

In addition to speaking to her about her room as referenced above, could you ask her to assist you in tackling turning the dining room into a bedroom? Then you are joint problem solving and freeing up more space.

Then you could a situation where it would be possible to do something like:
You move into her room (so no boys messing up her stuff)
Your two older boys get a room each
Your two younger children continue to share.

You move into her room (so no boys messing up her stuff)

What about OP’s stuff??

If it’s that important to the daughter why isn’t it with her at her new home?

It sounds like the daughter is top of the totem pole above her own mother, no wonder she has unreasonably high (in the circumstances) expectations

Grumblies · 09/01/2026 06:49

rainandshine38 · 09/01/2026 06:19

I’m sorry but there she is with two bedrooms and two houses and there you all are with a tiny overcrowded house. She needs a reality check! You can say you are there for her and there will always be a roof for her but right now you are all struggling and need that room.

Agreed. I appreciate it must be difficult if she's been through a lot but she's old enough to understand you can't all be expected to leave her room untouched, only used when she infrequently comes to stay.

You need to sit her down and have a mature conversation about how entitled she is being.

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 06:49

Lemons1571 · 09/01/2026 06:47

Has she officially moved out? Changed her address with workplace, banks etc? I would be concerned - has an official move been discussed agreed with the boyfriend’s mother? Or is this one of those “drift” situations, where you could find the boyfriend’s mother gets fed up and suddenly calls a halt to the extra person?

She hasn’t officially moved out, it’s definately a ‘drift’ situation. Her boyfriend’s mother seems happy enough as my daughter pays her way over there and mum is on a low income. I just think after a year it’s time to start considering doing it properly and part of that would be an official move.

OP posts:
anon2022anon · 09/01/2026 06:50

I think I would completely rethink the layout while you have the opportunity.
Transform the dining room for you, with a sofa bed for DD and area for her stuff.
Small room for 14 year old
Bigger rooms for younger twins/ 19 year old
Would probably be my choice of layout.

Tpu · 09/01/2026 06:51

I think she needs to lose the sense of entitlement of it being “Her” room, and realise that it is her brothers room who very kindly is prepared to vacate it whenever she is at home. Including when/if she comes home permanently.

whistlesandbells · 09/01/2026 06:52

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 02:19

Her issue is it’s her personal space for when she comes home and she doesn’t want boys messing it up (I get that) Her argument also is that if she wanted to come home, she should feel able to, which includes her bedroom being available. This is what we are doing anyway, using it for her brother when she’s not home and her brother simply goes back in his bedroom when she’s home. I’m thinking long term … how long this is sustainable? Is it fair on the other children?

Edited

This has become the madness of kids ruling homes. Daughter is old enough at 17 to be living with a partner, contributing nothing (possibly in either home of substance) and yet treated as a child with 2 homes to flit between. Meanwhile you’re overcrowded and on eggshells she cannot be upset.

This is not the way of the world. Tell her straight - ‘when you are home it is your room, when you are not home someone else uses the bed. We are living in discomfort otherwise.’

Keroppi · 09/01/2026 06:53

Crack on with the dining room this weekend it'll be worth

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 06:53

Whyherewego · 09/01/2026 06:48

Why don't you say to DD that her room can be the dining room ? So then recruit her to help clear it up? Then the 14 Yr old gets her current room and you solve a problem?

One of my autistic children is due to go into residential care this year and she has even said that I can then move into her room with my remaining five year old and she could have our old bedroom…
It’s as though she’s keeping one toe in here and one over there so when she says things like this I think the relationship is more to suit her rather than how she feels about the boyfriend. (She can’t cope with my son who is autistic who is loud and disruptive in the home)
Very difficult for me. She would not be open to moving into the dining room.

OP posts:
Grumblies · 09/01/2026 06:55

She would not be open to moving into the dining room

Is she your favourite child? It's so odd that you're giving her so much agency in a home she doesn't live in.

LoudSnoringDog · 09/01/2026 06:57

I was kind of understanding your daughter until your last post. She’s dictating to you what your living situation should be and you need to stop this. Is ludicrous to suggest she has your bigger room when she’s hardly there!!

did she observe much of the domestic abuse? You are being bullied by her.,

socks1107 · 09/01/2026 07:00

Could you look for a second hand futon or sofa bed for the dining room so that when she is home she can have that space as private and then your son gets a room he rightly needs?

euff · 09/01/2026 07:00

The room you share with the younger two is bigger and when one of the children move into care she wants you and the 5year old to swap into her smaller room when she’s hardly ever there?

pilates · 09/01/2026 07:01

Your daughter is coming across quite entitled and you’re enabling.

2026x · 09/01/2026 07:02

You don’t have enough room for her to monopolise a room when she is barely there. She needs to allow it to be used when she is not there but it should also be ready for her to use when she comes back - ie if her brother has been sleeping there, he needs to make the bed. If she comes back then things have to go back to the same as before.

GreenGodiva · 09/01/2026 07:05

In your shoes I’d be looking at multiple things.

in the tiny box room if you can fit a single bed I’m assuming you could fit bunks? That could give both your son and daughter a fixed bed ( him full time and her when she drops in). Or could that room be used for the twins and you get a sofa bed in the dining room or living room? I think long term you definitely need to look at using all your space. So bedroom in the dining room for you, sofa bed in the living room for occasional use by daughter, twins in the biggest bedroom, boys have a room each. But knowing the way things go you will just get it sorted and your daughter will want to come home.

i also agree that while it’s nice to be gentle with your daughter, it’s a huge luxury that she gets to utilise two homes by choice when your other children are fighting for personal space and crammed in adult sardines. It’sa shame she has this privilege but the others can’t even sleep in an empty bed. So id definitely be explaining this and telling her while she will always have a place to live with you, she can’t expect a dedicated room when nobody else can have that and her room Sits empty.

Climbinghigher · 09/01/2026 07:05

rainandshine38 · 09/01/2026 06:19

I’m sorry but there she is with two bedrooms and two houses and there you all are with a tiny overcrowded house. She needs a reality check! You can say you are there for her and there will always be a roof for her but right now you are all struggling and need that room.

This.

The only issue really is that she is so young, but I think a conversation explaining that there will always be a space for her at home and rooms will be rejiggled if she needs to return home is enough. She can’t really have an empty room just because she’s a girl. She must see the impact on others in the family. And I do understand the difficulties with trauma - my youngest kids experienced significant trauma - I still commandeer their rooms once they leave (one so far, the other shortly). She does need to know she can come home but keeping an empty room for her is prioritising her over your sons, and that’s not fair - particularly given the high support needs of your younger sons.

incidentally my youngest is moving in with a friend (a girl) who has been asked to leave the family home due to overcrowding & because she is the eldest. It’s just reality sometimes - she’s not much older than your daughter. Still young enough for me to do a bit of a double take.

Newbuildtooldbuild · 09/01/2026 07:05

I think you are being far too nice here.
I’m shocked you are sharing a room with 2 youngest, you have two teens sharing, and an empty room kept mostly free for DD who’s rarely there.

Upsetbetty · 09/01/2026 07:11

DaughterOfPearl · 09/01/2026 06:14

I think a lot of this could be resolved by getting on with turning the dining room into a bedroom.
What actually needs doing? Surely it is just a case of removing existing furniture and putting a bed/wardrobe in.
This is something that could be done this weekend.

I agree with this. Get your 19yr old to help with this. Your dd and her bf should help too. All hands on deck for that project and let you ds19 sleep there as he has a work pattern to consider DS14 stays put. As she is only 17 I would expect her to need that room.

Barrenfieldoffucks · 09/01/2026 07:12

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 06:53

One of my autistic children is due to go into residential care this year and she has even said that I can then move into her room with my remaining five year old and she could have our old bedroom…
It’s as though she’s keeping one toe in here and one over there so when she says things like this I think the relationship is more to suit her rather than how she feels about the boyfriend. (She can’t cope with my son who is autistic who is loud and disruptive in the home)
Very difficult for me. She would not be open to moving into the dining room.

Why would she want/expect your room? Is it the biggest?