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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Passive Aggressive Washing Up ….. or Am I Being Unfair?

114 replies

PassiveAggWasherUpper · 01/04/2026 14:11

Using a name change for this one.

My husband works from home as a contractor. His hours can be 8–6 (sometimes later if he’s on call fixing issues), but he also has some flexibility – for example he might finish early some days to go to the gym.

I work 9–3:30, 4 days a week (term time), in quite a physical job where I’m on my feet most of the day.

The issue is the washing up. We don’t have space for a dishwasher, so everything is done by hand. When I get home, the washing up from the day – breakfast bowls from all of us, his lunch things, cups etc – is often just piled up waiting for me. I did rant about this once or twice because it felt frustrating walking in from work straight into a pile of dishes.

His solution now is to wash up only what he uses. So he washes his own plate, mug etc as he goes along, but leaves the children’s breakfast things, shared cups, etc for me to do when I get in.

When I mentioned this, I said it felt quite passive aggressive. He insists it’s not – he says he just doesn’t have 10 spare minutes in one go during the day to do everything, but washing his own things takes seconds so he just does that as he goes along.

The thing is, it’s giving me absolute rage every time I walk in and see the remaining pile. I do understand that he probably thinks he’s being helpful, but it feels a bit like he’s proving a point.

Part of me now wants to go full petty and just wash up my own things or only clean the bits of the house I personally use… which obviously isn’t the solution.

Am I being unreasonable to expect that if he’s home all day, the general daytime washing up would be done? Or is this a fair split and I need to let it go?

Interested to hear how others divide things when one partner WFH, particularly when there’s no dishwasher involved.

OP posts:
suburburban · 01/04/2026 14:14

I’d be so cross too

he could at least soak the stuff at the same time he is washing up his stuff, I’m sure he could make time

shame you can’t squash a dishwasher in somewhere, game changer

Squirrelchops1 · 01/04/2026 14:14

What a moron. I wash up when WFH whilst making a cuppa, breakfast things literally take a few minutes.

itsadlibitum · 01/04/2026 14:16

What an ass. How long does it take to do a couple of plates and mugs from breakfast. This is 100% a power move - the responsibility for washing up is yours OP, he's just doing you a favour by covering his own.

ALittleBitofWensleydale · 01/04/2026 14:16

Ask if he is part of a family, or a student living in a student house. Lazy fucker.
My adult DS did this on his return from university. He doesn't any more.

Raindropskeepfallingon · 01/04/2026 14:17

You are walking in from a part time job with short days. He works full time. But he’s somehow responsible for washing up your breakfast stuff?

I’m with him I’m afraid.

properidiot · 01/04/2026 14:18

If he was out of the house at work til 6 - having left at 8am, then you wouldn't give it a second thought. The washing up would be there when you got home. When you WFH you are working. My DH used to WFH years ago, long before Covid, and it was never expected that he'd be doing housework during the day as he was working.

Though I'd be inclined to find two minutes before I left in the morning to do it. I hate seeing washing up languishing in the sink too. You work less hours than him so will be at home more. Though I'd hope he would be involved is some aspects of childcare/housework on the days he doesn't work.

lightoutisntit · 01/04/2026 14:19

The PA stuff (if it is PA) is annoying but if he's working all day why on earth are you expecting him to have also done all the washing up? You're acting as if just because he's at home he's got loads of free time.

lightoutisntit · 01/04/2026 14:21

Him doing just his own lunch stuff does make sense because then he's at least clearing up his own things as he goes along. On the other hand washing up the whole family's breakfast things during his working day would not make sense.

TooPoor4PandaPooTea · 01/04/2026 14:26

Why don't you fill the basin with hot soapy water while the kettle is boiling in the morning, have the children wash their own bowl and cup after breakfast? Assume they are at school for you to be working term time only, so old enough to wash a couple of dishes.

wracky · 01/04/2026 14:30

We split it differently. For breakfast whoever is up first runs the bowl of water and clears the drainer. Everyone washes up their own bowl and cup. Not sure how old your children are but we did this from quite young - before this we just left a tidy pile by the sink.

Lunch we just leave in a neat pile.

Whoever's washing up after dinner does the lunch stuff too. No griping, just gets on with it.

It works for us but relies on both of us chipping in to do our bit. It wouldn't work if it meant one person constantly shirking and the other constantly having to do all the work. Actually DH does it most days but I cook dinner and/or get other housework done while he's doing it so no one feels hard done by.

I don't think WFHers should feel obliged to wash up after every meal, but equally I can understand your frustration if he is expecting you to do all the work. If the dirty crockery bothers you clear out space for a bowl under the sink and leave them out of sight in there. You just need to be sure whether he is actually expecting you to do it all, or whether he is just leaving housework to out of hours. Basically is it a disagreement about timings or labour.

Screamingabdabz · 01/04/2026 14:32

YANBU to get the rage op. Even if you had a dishwasher there are still battles over loading and unloading. I think this is the problem when women work part time to fit around children. They also become the general default dogsbody, cook and bottlewasher and it feels unfair, even if it’s an accident of circumstance. And I imagine if you have a part time job as a TA - by the time you’ve picked up kids and walked in, it’s just as exhausting as working full time.

I don’t know what the answer is op but all I’d say is be kind to each other on this. I went to battle on petty shit like this because I was so angry but it knocked our marriage quite badly and looking back we were both working hard in our own way.

Maybe if he put all the pots to soak when he’s doing his then that’s half the battle as then it’s just a quick rinse? Or just calmly tell him how it makes you feel, and just ask him to listen and empathise if nothing else.

icouldholditwithacobweb · 01/04/2026 14:35

Oh, what BS. I work for myself from home, and I manage to get the washing up done. You set a timer for 5 mins, 10 mins, 15 mins or whatever and just get on with it - he DOES have time, he's choosing not to! I do not think you are being unreasonable here, OP.

If he doesn't have time to do it during the day for whatever reason he can still bloody well get on and do it either before or after work, unless he's fully doing childcare, cooking, prep for school etc and wouldn't have time.

INeedAnotherName · 01/04/2026 14:43

If he did only his, and you did only yours, who does the children's, the pets and the cooking utensils?

He is a knob OP but before I say LTB does he do anything that ensures a smooth running of the household such as cleaning, laundry, shopping, kids stuff, and do you both get equal downtime?

Sassylovesbooks · 01/04/2026 14:57

It takes no more than 5 minutes to wash up the breakfast items, and to leave them to drain. Unless your household is 20 people, then to say there's not time to spend 5-10 minutes washing/drying up, is a lame excuse.

I can't go out leaving crockery/cutlery from breakfast. It would have to be washed up, at the very least. I like to come home to a tidy kitchen!!

Swiftie1878 · 01/04/2026 15:00

Find room for a dishwasher, even a half sized one; it’s a game changer.

Oh, and YANBU. In a ten hour day, everyone can find 10 minutes.

DeftGoldHedgehog · 01/04/2026 15:02

Swiftie1878 · 01/04/2026 15:00

Find room for a dishwasher, even a half sized one; it’s a game changer.

Oh, and YANBU. In a ten hour day, everyone can find 10 minutes.

Then he can leave everything on the side instead of loading the dishwasher.

rainydaysaway · 01/04/2026 15:04

Wash your stuff and half of the kids stuff (shared kids, shared jobs), and to be extra petty wash half a plate, half a bowl, etc…

Swiftie1878 · 01/04/2026 15:06

DeftGoldHedgehog · 01/04/2026 15:02

Then he can leave everything on the side instead of loading the dishwasher.

😂😂 OMG. Can you imagine!

Madarch · 01/04/2026 15:12

I WFH.

I did the washing up from last night amd this morning at lunchtime while I was waiting for my fish fingers to cook. 18 minutes, all done.

Your DH is the unreasonable one.

Raindropskeepfallingon · 01/04/2026 15:21

Swiftie1878 · 01/04/2026 15:00

Find room for a dishwasher, even a half sized one; it’s a game changer.

Oh, and YANBU. In a ten hour day, everyone can find 10 minutes.

So why can’t she find the time in the same ten hour period, of which she’s only working 6.5 hours. Why shouldn’t she fit the dishes into her day?

I’d be annoyed to come down for my lunch after starting work at 8am to be faced with a load of breakfast dishes I might think my partner could have just done before they left for work, presumably considerably after 8am. Being annoyed at dishes being left for you works both ways.

Differentforgirls · 01/04/2026 15:27

suburburban · 01/04/2026 14:14

I’d be so cross too

he could at least soak the stuff at the same time he is washing up his stuff, I’m sure he could make time

shame you can’t squash a dishwasher in somewhere, game changer

I don’t get dishwashers and I have never had one. Surely it’s easier just to wash the dishes, and put them away, rather than rinse them, load them, unload them, use electricity to wash them, then put them away?

theemmadilemma · 01/04/2026 15:31

Oh god I would end up being massively passive agressive in return.

Fuck off is it anything to do with time. It must take him longer to carefully select his own stuff only as he goes.

He can find the time. If he can prepare and eat lunch, go to the gym, he can find the time. He just doesn't want to and he's pretending not to be a complete fucking PA twat when he clearly is.

Next time don't wash his clothes. Say you didn't have time as you had to get the washing up finished.

Cunt.

redskyAtNigh · 01/04/2026 15:32

I'm going to assume your children are school age.
So, if you provide them with a bowl/sink of soapy water they can wash their own breakfast dishes and problem solved.

Alternatively, if the breakfast dishes annoy you that much, why not spend 3 minutes washing them yourself before you go?

Hollycoco · 01/04/2026 15:32

Sorry I’m team husband. He starts work at 8 and you don’t start work til 9. Why can’t you or the kids wash up the breakfast stuff before leaving in the morning?

He also finishes work much later than you, so you could also easily do it when you get in from work.

theemmadilemma · 01/04/2026 15:35

Hollycoco · 01/04/2026 15:32

Sorry I’m team husband. He starts work at 8 and you don’t start work til 9. Why can’t you or the kids wash up the breakfast stuff before leaving in the morning?

He also finishes work much later than you, so you could also easily do it when you get in from work.

Given that she mentions childrens breakfast, I think it's highly likley she's feeding them, dressing them, running them to school etc while he's already working, so probably not sitting around in her dressing gown ignoring the washing up.

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