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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:
MagicStarrz · 09/01/2026 12:11

It's good you don't want her to feel pushed out but unreasonable to leave a room empty in a house that is clearly overcrowded.

OP tell her that is her home and she is welcome there for as long as she wants (if that is the case) but that if her choice is to life elsewhere then you cannot leave the room empty while others are sharing. If she stays home once a week to keep her room then you need to tell her to choose. It doesn't mean she can't come back but she can't necessarily keep the room for herself.

Justonedilemmamn · 09/01/2026 12:12

17 is far too young. Convert the dining room to a sleep space for ds and leave her room for her.

MissDoubleU · 09/01/2026 12:13

Needspaceforlego · 09/01/2026 12:00

I think so too.
I think clearing her room for one of her brothers is effectively pushing her out.
17 is very young, and it wouldn't be that unusual for 17yos couples to split up.
You don't want her to feel she can't come home.

Its a difficult one.

Particularly when the 19 year old son is staying home still. 2 years older than the DD but the DD is going to be shoved out.

It’s not easy being the lone girl with 4 brothers and it’s even worse when some of those siblings are very high needs due to ASD.

Pushing your child out into another family’s home because realistically you don’t have enough space for all your children is shocking behaviour. OP should be focusing on making the home work better for ALL the children.

Her only DD, who is still a minor, doesn’t feel at home or happy there and it shows.

Justonedilemmamn · 09/01/2026 12:15

I'm astonished that anyone would call this 17 year old child selfish! Has everyone forgotten that children have developmental needs for privacy, space and security? She's been through a lot too. Op you sound lovely but don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

BunnyLake · 09/01/2026 12:16

Wolfpa · 09/01/2026 12:08

Sounds as if your daughter has already been forced out of the home.

keeping an unused room is madness but this may be the nail in the coffin when it comes to her ever calling it home again.

That’s a bit harsh considering OP had to leave DV. They have to play with the hand they have.

user2848502016 · 09/01/2026 12:21

Tricky because 17 is still young but I don’t think it’s fair to have an empty room when your other DC are sharing.
I’d sit down with her and say you’re not chucking her out, she is welcome to visit any time and if things don’t work out with the boyfriend she can come home. But for most of the time her 14 year old brother is going to have her room. If she needs to stay over or come home he will go back in with his brother.
Also make clear to your 14 year old DS that while it is his room for now he will be expected to let his sister sleep there when she visits because there’s nowhere else for her to sleep.

KmcK87 · 09/01/2026 12:21

Also can I ask when you say your daughter has “gone through a lot” is this specific to just her or have your other children also went through what she has? This does make a difference as if they’ve all been through a lot then it does seem like she is being favoured.

JanefromLondon1 · 09/01/2026 12:25

I’d hope that no child of mine would see
me sharing a room with 2 of my children and not say for me to have some space of my own.

Minjou · 09/01/2026 12:26

ElatedAzurePlayer · 09/01/2026 02:04

It’s not black and white - she’s been through a lot. It’s just I don’t know how to handle such a fragile situation but it’s been over a year 🤷‍♀️

Your daughter moved in with her boyfriend at SIXTEEN?

Anyway, you simply don't have the space to be sentimental about rooms. Tell her that. If she's old enough to.move out and live like an adult, she's old enough to understand that.

OriginalUsername2 · 09/01/2026 12:37

Sometimes you just have to be the parent. Your kids won’t always like you for it, that comes with the territory.

PloddingAlong21 · 09/01/2026 12:45

I feel the conversation needs to be had directly so everyone is on the same page. More so - she can’t make that decision in isolation. It doesn’t sound like she’s living with her boyfriend….rather than with her boyfriend’s mum.

what does the boyfriends mum think of her permanently living there and possible ramifications of that if they break up/argue etc. also a change to her council tax etc.

I feel to permanently move your daughter’s bedroom implies she is permanently at the other mums. I think she should be part of this discussion.

Needspaceforlego · 09/01/2026 12:53

I bet she stays over at the other families house rather than has actually moved in.
What's her registered address with the GP, bank, benefits agency ?

FamBae · 09/01/2026 13:04

I would tackle that dining room, could you turn it into a room for your 19yr old?

Minjou · 09/01/2026 13:07

Needspaceforlego · 09/01/2026 12:53

I bet she stays over at the other families house rather than has actually moved in.
What's her registered address with the GP, bank, benefits agency ?

She's there every night and all.her things are there. That's moved in, no matter what address her bank has.

Tessasanderson · 09/01/2026 13:13

It is unreasonable to not utilise the bedroom to its fullest considering your current issues.

Just say to your daughter that the/a bedroom will ALWAYS be available to her if things dont work out in the future for her relationship. You are going to use the bedroom as you see fit now and she will have to work around that going forward.

Of course dont make any promises to whoever you put in this room in the immediate future so that you can easily reverse the situation if needed should your daughter need to come back. IE if decorating then use neutral colours. TBH i would do that anyhow and then it becomes easier to make these changes.

PurpleThistle7 · 09/01/2026 13:25

I absolutely would not assume she can hold a room perpetually just in case something changes. Lots of things might change in the meantime

can you prioritise sorting out the dining room with her help? Say that you can leave her room as is but she needs to help you get the dining room sorted for the 19 year old so your sons can stop sharing.

Inertia · 09/01/2026 14:07

This isn’t really a situation where an adult has moved out as part of a permanent stable relationship- she’s struggling at home and is spending most of her time at her boyfriend’s mum’s house. A 17 year old is not long out of childhood, and you do need to be prepared to accept that she might need to move back in at some point if the relationship breaks down.

That said , the demand to use your bedroom comes across as very entitled.

Is the dining room a completely separate room that you can manage without?
Do the younger children need to be in with you due to care needs?

These facts impact the options available to you.

I would suggest :

19 yo son moves into the dining room- I expect he would be perfectly happy to do some of the work to get his own room. This would minimise the impact his work patterns have on the younger children.

14 yo son keeps current room.

You sleep in daughter’s room when she isn’t there, for the time being.

Once your younger child has moved into residential care, you could look at creating a female bedroom that she could share with you when she comes home. If it’s the biggest room, you may be able to create a degree of separation.

You do need to maximise bedroom space, but she’s probably frightened that she’s not going to have an option to come home if things go wrong with the boyfriend.

CandyColouredEggshells · 09/01/2026 14:08

@ElatedAzurePlayer
No advice OP, as I’m a mom of 1. But wanted to say well done on leaving and starting over, it is such a brave, scary thing to do.

Speaking from personal experience I also completely understand how you (or anyone else in a similar situation for that matter) can have such a drastic change of living arrangements and financial circumstances after leaving abuse. It’s bloody hard. Well done.

Pherian · 09/01/2026 14:14

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.

I’d have a conversation with her so there are no hard feelings - but you’re completely right to want to use the space.

BruisedNeckMeat · 09/01/2026 14:57

Justonedilemmamn · 09/01/2026 12:15

I'm astonished that anyone would call this 17 year old child selfish! Has everyone forgotten that children have developmental needs for privacy, space and security? She's been through a lot too. Op you sound lovely but don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

Agree with this. Especially a child who has witnessed domestic violence, been homeless and in a refuge, as well as at 12/13 years old having two newborn siblings who have severe needs.

She’s had a shit time too.

Manthide · 09/01/2026 15:35

Dd3 was 18 last week.and I can't imagine her being mature enough to be in a committed relationship and move out! When she was born there were 6 if us living in a 3 bed house (no dining room) and ds had the box room whilst dd1 and dd2 shared. The older 2 went to university when dd3 was 3/4 but we kept their room as was until they had both finished university (one did medicine) and had permanent jobs. Dd3 was about 8 when she moved in. Ds started his first permanent job after graduating last month. He now lives a few hours away and he understands that his room will be used by guests when he's not there. It will still be basically his until he moves into his own place (rented/mortgaged) as he's in a house share atm and can't take all his things.

Needspaceforlego · 09/01/2026 17:00

Manthide · 09/01/2026 15:35

Dd3 was 18 last week.and I can't imagine her being mature enough to be in a committed relationship and move out! When she was born there were 6 if us living in a 3 bed house (no dining room) and ds had the box room whilst dd1 and dd2 shared. The older 2 went to university when dd3 was 3/4 but we kept their room as was until they had both finished university (one did medicine) and had permanent jobs. Dd3 was about 8 when she moved in. Ds started his first permanent job after graduating last month. He now lives a few hours away and he understands that his room will be used by guests when he's not there. It will still be basically his until he moves into his own place (rented/mortgaged) as he's in a house share atm and can't take all his things.

Where did DD3 sleep?

I do agree the DD is very young to be in a committed relationship and shes had lots to contend with in her short life.
I think the door has to be kept open for her.

Manthide · 09/01/2026 17:35

@Needspaceforlego in our bedroom (mine and now exdh)

Neuroma · 09/01/2026 18:08

I feel like you’re being very reasonable.
she’s been out a year, in the nicest possible way, how long are you going to keep it her bedroom? She could be 22 and need to come home. Remind her there is always going to be room for her to come home if she needs to, but it isn’t fair on you or her siblings to have to live how you are when there is a perfectly good bedroom that could be used.
I'm saying this as somebody who moved out at 17 with their long term (5 yrs) boyfriend, we broke up 2 years later. My room was redecorated before all my stuff even was even gone.
I understand your circumstances but she has to understand it’s not fair on you all who are actually living there, when she isn’t living there.

PashaMinaMio · 09/01/2026 18:16

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 left home at 16. Moved abroad for work. My brother took my old room over. It was never mine ever again.
Your DD is now moving in an adult world. Wake up and smell the coffee.