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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:
Grumblies · 09/01/2026 09:42

Personally I don't think it's right for a 14 yr old boy and 17 yr old girl to share a room, even if it is once in a while.

I might have missed it but from what I've read no one has suggested this have they?

If one child eventually moves into the dining room then the others (the 14 year old and 5 year old) can use the other rooms and if the daughter moves back they can move people around again to allow her to have her own space.

KimHwn · 09/01/2026 09:48

Gently OP, you are putting one child's wants over the needs of the others. This must be very difficult for your 14-year-old, seeing that there is an empty room right there for him but knowing that his sister is allowed to have dibs on it just in case she happens to want to pop back. It's very unfair.

FollowSpot · 09/01/2026 09:53

I think she is young, and though her relationship sounds good and healthy, it isn’t unrealistic to think that it won’t be for life. Not that many of us are in adult relationships that started when we were 16.

And I think her upset at seeing her room used is because emotionally she still needs to know she has a home with you.

Also I would hate to put her in a position where she stayed in the relationship just because she had nowhere else to go.

So I would have the conversation about the room being used when she is not home, but emphasise that come what may she will always have a space in your home should she need it.

And pragmatically, won’t your chances of getting a 4 bed be stronger if she is still officially living with you?

So many of us have Dc living at home until their late 20s due to housing costs and low wages. So I wouldn’t be pressurising her out.

Your own sleep needs deserve attention and that dining room is waiting ….

Strawberrydelight78 · 09/01/2026 09:58

I would let the 14 year old have the room. Decorate the room for him to make it his. But if she stays then he shares with his brother. Or could have a sofa bed in the living room.

takealettermsjones · 09/01/2026 09:58

How often is DD coming home OP? You said it's less and less than once a week, I'm just wondering exactly how much she's there.

I would also want to make it clear she is always welcome, so I think I'd try to frame it as look, rooms in a house are not fixed, we can always change the setup - so we're changing it now because it makes sense, but if you need to move back then we'll just change it again, etc.

I'm now thinking that I would do:

Bedroom 1: twins
Bedroom 2: you
Bedroom 3: 14yo
Dining room conversion: 19yo most of the time *

  • When DD comes back, she can either share with you or she can take the dining room and 19yo can share with you. Maybe this could alternate. Family meeting needed 🤣
Mangelwurzelfortea · 09/01/2026 09:58

She's not even 18 yet which IMHO is too young to be living with a 'partner.' It may not work out and it isn't particularly fair on her boyfriend's mum that she's now got an extra mouth to feed. I'd keep her room at home and turn the dining room into another bedroom.

Hotpants123 · 09/01/2026 10:00

Gosh, some quite hard responses here. She is still your daughter and has gone through a lot. I totally understand why you still want her to feel welcome whenever she comes home.

So I think the conversation with her on when the room can be used is not unreasonable. Two brothers sharing a room is not that unreasonable!

Get on with turning the dinning room into a bedroom, give that to one of the boys.

They you share her bedroom with her - sounds like she is more open to that.
I would not push her to move out 100%, does she really need to commit to that. She wants the comfort of knowing she can come home.

Best of luck

GAJLY · 09/01/2026 10:03

you cannot be serious and keep her room free when you’re all cramped together?! I’d reallocate the space and buy a pull out sofa for her to access at any time. She cannot have 2 bedrooms to her self that’s very unfair on the family. Looks like favouritism to me.

noidea69 · 09/01/2026 10:04

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 01:50

She isn’t financially contributing to the household but I don’t expect her to as she’s not living here. She does need feeding and laundry doing etc obviously when she visits but I don’t see an issue with that as her visits are so infrequent.

is she financial contributing to her partners place?

Grumblies · 09/01/2026 10:07

noidea69 · 09/01/2026 10:04

is she financial contributing to her partners place?

The OP said she is.

To note my daughter regularly buys food shopping and tops up utilities on my advice at her boyfriend’s house.

Branleuse · 09/01/2026 10:08

Its a dilemma I think. I'd want to find out whether she thought she was likely to move back full time or whether she feels like she would move somewhere with her boyfriend next.
I think it's important that she knows that you aren't kicking her out, but it does seem that she has started the process of moving out naturally herself and you are happy for her. That if she wanted or needed to move back in then you would make room and she will always be able to come back as far as you are concerned, but in an overcrowded house, you can't promise that you won't reconfigure rooms to make best use of space for everyone. You don't think it's fair to have an empty room 90%of the time when others are sharing and cramped. Be real here.

Ophy83 · 09/01/2026 10:09

What are the sizes of the various bedrooms? Ideally you and the two younger daughters should be in the largest room as there are 3 of you. Teenage sons in bedrooms 2 and 3 respectively. Dining room available for eldest dd when she visits. Arrangement of bedrooms open for reconsideration if she moves home.

Angels1111 · 09/01/2026 10:10

I would at some point tell her that you're going to give the room but if she at any point feels like she needs to come home she can do so IMMEDIATELY and you'll rearrange the rooms then (eg the boys can share again if they are understanding, or you'll convert the dining room) to give her a safe space. At that age I feel like she shouldn't feel she has nowhere to go if she decides she is uncomfortable in her relationship.

GAJLY · 09/01/2026 10:11

GAJLY · 09/01/2026 10:03

you cannot be serious and keep her room free when you’re all cramped together?! I’d reallocate the space and buy a pull out sofa for her to access at any time. She cannot have 2 bedrooms to her self that’s very unfair on the family. Looks like favouritism to me.

Or even get bunk beds in there to allow them both a proper bed in a bedroom.

MrsJeanLuc · 09/01/2026 10:13

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

Yeah, I think this is the issue you need to address. How much personal space is she entitled to demand?

I would buy a lockable cupboard for "her stuff" (or even just designate one corner of the room as "her space"). The rest of the room becomes shared space which her brother can use. When she comes to stay, he moves his stuff back to his room and she gets her stuff out of the cupboard.

LakieLady · 09/01/2026 10:14

Eenameenadeeka · 09/01/2026 01:56

Your house is already overcrowded, I wouldn't be leaving a room empty for a child who's moved out.

I agree.

It must be quite a struggle, esp with 2 disabled children.

I hope you get a bigger place soon, OP.

Allisnotlost1 · 09/01/2026 10:16

You’ve got a lot goon on @ElatedAzurePlayer . I don’t agree with others that your daughter is being entitled, she’s been through a lot too and is allowed to want to keep her place in the family home. Whether that’s practical or not is a different matter. I understand why you want her to know she can come back if she needs or wants to, but in the meantime it’s not sensible for the rest of you to suffer.

Is there a reason you’re reluctant to turn the dining room into a bedroom? I can see the utility of having a space for eating when there are so many of you and with mixed needs (ages as well as the autistic children’s needs). If you use it to eat together and chat it could be a nice thing and therefore worth holding on to. But if not, then crack on and get it turned into a bedroom asap and give whichever child needs it most some breathing room. It sounds like you could also do with that yourself, so you do need to have that conversation with your daughter. How about you taking her room, your 14 year old could then come in why you when needed (or go into the dining room).

TheCloakroom · 09/01/2026 10:19

In all seriousness, I would redecorate in a neutral colourway and buy new bedding etc, so the 19 (or 14 year old) can have a full time bedroom. If she comes back for good, she can have the bedroom back. She's not a princess, you can't just leave a bedroom fallow can you whe others need it

Just explain it to her as you don't want her not to be able to return if the relationship goes wrong

Pearlstillsinging · 09/01/2026 10:20

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 01:52

We are in a three bed, this is mainly due to the fact there just aren’t any four beds in the area we were moved to. We have been here for around a year and a half, we are on the housing list and this was only meant to be temporary. Temporary housing with the LA could mean forever and a day though but I am just thankful we have a safe place to live. To note we have a dining room which I could double up as a sleep space - I just have had too much going on to actually tackle that.

Could you fit a sofa bed, or similar in the dining room? If so, I would ask her to sleep there when she is back home for the odd night, with the understanding that if her relationship breaks down and she needs to return for the longer term, she will have her own room back.

chunkyBoo · 09/01/2026 10:21

Do you happen to have a dining room? Just wondering if she / the 14 year old, could have a sofa bed in a dining area that she uses when she returns home?
it’s tricky as she’s only 17 (my DD’s age) and relationships at that age don’t always last, so her room should be her room, BUT it’s insane that if she sleeps there say half a dozen days a year that a 19 year old shares with a 14 year old … that’s a huge age difference as far as maturity is concerned and I’m sure they both need some space, so one of them staying in ‘her room’ whilst she’s essentially moved out isn’t a bad thing

Beamur · 09/01/2026 10:25

I think you do need to keep space for her. She's only 17 and could easily need to come back home.
I'd suggest your eldest son gets the dining room, younger son stays in his room. Maybe you use your DD's room when she's not there? Especially once your other child is in residential care? That way everyone would get a peaceful night's sleep. You could go back in with your youngest when DD comes to stay.
I understand you don't want her to feel edged out but include her in the conversation - there will always be room for her, but as a large family you don't have the luxury of keeping rooms empty.

ERthree · 09/01/2026 10:26

She has left home so the room is free to use. Stop pandering to the princess. Why are you going without your own bedroom? If she wants to keep the room she has to pay.

TheMorgenmuffel · 09/01/2026 10:27

She is very young. You need to talk to her and say that there are so many people in the house and already not enough space and it is unfair for an entire room to be kept empty for someone who uses it so rarely.
Reassure her that this is her home and she is always welcome but she has to understand that when space is so limited, it has to be used wisely.

If she is too young to understand that, I would argue she's too young to be practically moved out.

The logical has to be separated from the emotional. Repurposing a rarely used room is not a rejection of her.

PigletJohn · 09/01/2026 10:29

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 01:46

She’s 17, 18 beginning of February this year.

At that age, people sometimes move out then back again.

You can perhaps keep her a cupboard with her belongings, but not maintain a dedicated room.

Stressedoutmummyof3 · 09/01/2026 10:31

You seem to be favouring your DD over your DS though. You really shouldn't expect your 14:year old not to have his own room when there's a free room 99% of the time.
She's chosen to move out. You don't get to keep a room at your mum's house when other people need it. You have to explain that to your DD.
14 year old gets her room but if her relationship fails she can come back and 14: year old will share again. Of course your 19 year old might have moved out if that happens anyway.