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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:
Differentforgirls · 01/04/2026 18:10

suburburban · 01/04/2026 16:07

I really love my dishwasher and it is labour and time saving, you don’t need to rinse the dishes and it tidies up kitchen

DPs had one so I was used to it

So does just washing them.

Differentforgirls · 01/04/2026 18:12

GriseldaandMike · 01/04/2026 18:01

Only psychopaths and my mother-in-law rinse dishes before putting them in the dishwasher. It is literally the job of the dishwasher to wash the dishes there is no need to rinse them first.

Wouldn’t know!

CautiousLurker2 · 01/04/2026 18:14

No rota but tends to be whoever cracks first, so DH will wash up if the sink has stuff in it (or load it into the dishwasher: note the dishwasher doesn’t solve things, the conflict just transfers to who should empty the dishwasher).

In response: you could stop doing his laundry? Just filter out yours and the kids. Leave his to pile up?

BedlamEveryday · 01/04/2026 18:15

I get days where I’m so busy I don’t even have time to use the loo until I am absolutely bursting, so no way would I have time to wash a few dishes.

But that’s not every single day and on those quieter days, I do take 10-15 mins to tidy up.

So it depends on just how busy he is every day, but I am still slightly in his favour considering you work part time.

Hicupping · 01/04/2026 18:18

I had tiny kitchen in london, swapped in a shallower u bend and was able to fit a counter top dishwasher under the sink. Managed with that for 10 years. Standard kitchen fittings so should work with most kitchens, of course you lose that space but I can't live without a dishwasher unless its zombie apocalypse or something.

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 01/04/2026 18:22

PyongyangKipperbang · 01/04/2026 17:40

I think for me its the implication that any washing up the kids create is yours, whereas he can just look after himself....a common view sadly.

If he was being absolutely fair he should do exactly 50%, so his and half of the kids!

I would point out to him that him just doing his own tells you that he isnt interested in doing anything for the kids, that he thinks children are "women's work", and that is not the sort of man you thought he was. That will hit him square in the ego if he is halfway decent.

Bur Pyongyang, genuine question - why is 50% of the kid stuff his if he is doing much more work?

If OP works 9 to 3 every day and only in term, and I think not every day? She is doing around 25h a week. He is doing 40-50h.

So, surely, she does more childcare and housework? If she is home at 4pm and he is still working, surely she is hands on doing house stuff 4-6 and then when he is done, they both pick up whatever else needs doing, together?

PyongyangKipperbang · 01/04/2026 18:30

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 01/04/2026 18:22

Bur Pyongyang, genuine question - why is 50% of the kid stuff his if he is doing much more work?

If OP works 9 to 3 every day and only in term, and I think not every day? She is doing around 25h a week. He is doing 40-50h.

So, surely, she does more childcare and housework? If she is home at 4pm and he is still working, surely she is hands on doing house stuff 4-6 and then when he is done, they both pick up whatever else needs doing, together?

Because he is literally standing next to them when he washes his own! Its hardly an onerous task. And I work a "on my feet all day" job, its physically very draining, so walking into the house to have to start again makes your heart sink.

Its seems so petty and point making, that it clearly is sending a message.

hididdlyho · 01/04/2026 18:34

It's shitty to deliberately pick out and wash only the things he's used every time. Surely sorting through and figuring out what he's used takes more time than randomly washing through half the pile, if that's all he has time to do?!

DoloresDelEriba · 01/04/2026 18:36

Get a dishwasher and a divorce. He sounds horrible.

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 01/04/2026 18:39

I guess @PyongyangKipperbang it just feels like maybe he doesn't genuinely have time.

Who knows.....

And yes, I know that feeling myself of walking in when the house is a state - difference is, my H doesn't work!

Chetchy · 01/04/2026 18:42

Awful behaviour.
What a selfish loser.

Do you cook?
If so stop including him, same with laundry.
Coming in to wash up when someone is wfh all day is so poor.

PyongyangKipperbang · 01/04/2026 18:45

JohnnyMcGrathSaysFuckOff · 01/04/2026 18:39

I guess @PyongyangKipperbang it just feels like maybe he doesn't genuinely have time.

Who knows.....

And yes, I know that feeling myself of walking in when the house is a state - difference is, my H doesn't work!

I see what you are saying but I am not buying it. This seems too pointed to be a time issue.

Far too many men think that a wife who works fewer hours should do absolutely everything, instead of it being shared proportionally. More than a few expect it of a wife who works the same or more hours!

The rot starts in maternity leave imo, and from then on house/kids are her domain and all he has to do is work....nothing else.

Gioia1 · 01/04/2026 18:49

The utter selfishness. There are neglectful mothers but I can’t imagine a mother doing this.

CelticSilver · 01/04/2026 18:51

Table top dishwasher, everyone puts their own stuff in it when finished eating. Switch on before you leave.

JLou08 · 01/04/2026 18:52

It sounds like he is working nearly double the hours you do. Working at home doesn't mean skiving off and having time to clean (well it doesn't in most cases). Being sat on the phone and doing admin on screen all day is absolutely draining. I've done physical jobs- waitress, nursery nurse on shifts of 8-10 hours. I felt more energised after that than I do after working at a screen all day.

Hellohelga · 01/04/2026 19:02

I wouldn’t have the energy for sex after a day on my feet then all that washing up. But I’d have the energy just to quickly get myself off.

RainsFall · 01/04/2026 19:05

Not sure on this one. If he was working out of the house, the dishes would be there when you get home anyway (minus his lunch stuff). So to expect him to do it when he’s working from home seems a bit off, working from home is still working.

Could you compromise and come to an agreement that he does the washing up from the day when he’s finished work and you agree to take responsibility for a different task? You will still notice it when you get in but might find it less annoying knowing you don’t have to do it. Failing that a tabletop dishwasher might help.

Ferrissia3 · 01/04/2026 19:06

I wfh and pomodoro a lot - I use the breaks for housework, which works really well for me.

I'm not sure this will totally address your problem though...

Bubblefun70 · 01/04/2026 19:08

Are you sure you cannot fit in a dishwasher somewhere....?

NoSoupForU · 01/04/2026 19:09

Are you actually taking the piss? I work from home a lot and me being physically in the house doesn't make me available for chores.

Granted, if he finishes early he should do them. But if he's working 8 till 6 and you're working very part time hours then your head must be wired wrong if you think you've got it harder.

Funkle · 01/04/2026 19:19

I think your DH could 100% fit in the washing up. Yes he is working from home but he will be taking breaks at points. People all over the world who work use breaks to complete home tasks. It can be popping to the shop to pick up things for dinner, making a phone call or buying gifts ect.

If this thread was the other way around I think the majority of replies would be different. Men just seem to be given a pass if they work more hours but this usually just means the wife does more of the child care, domestic tasks and mental load.

The joy of working from home is it reduces your time out of the house, so you have more none work time. Why are posters pushing an extra task I the morning onto the person that works out of the home and is likely getting DC and herself ready and out the door when the DH could spend 5 minutes of his break washing up. She isn't asking him to complete all household tasks that day.

I think in reality if op was in her husbands position it would just be expected that she would do the dishes and she would without even thinking about it.

FrangipaniBlue · 01/04/2026 19:26

I wfh - sometimes I have time for proper breaks but sometimes I don’t. On busy days I often don’t even come downstairs!

I don’t know why MNers assume everyone who wfh has nice cushy easy relaxed jobs.

That being said, he’s being unreasonable to just wash his own - if he has time to put hot soapy water in the sink for those then he has time to wash a few extra bowls and cups at the same time.

FrangipaniBlue · 01/04/2026 19:27

I don’t actually think it should be either if your responsibility every day…… I think you need to take turns to do it probably in the morning

2catsandhappy · 01/04/2026 19:33

Just buy a sink drainer sized dishwasher. Ideal for small or rented kitchens.
Fill up with water and point the drain hose in the sink.
Never had an argument with my dd after getting one. I load, she unloads.
Uses the same water as a small bowl.
You won't look back @PassiveAggWasherUpper and you will wonder why you didn't buy one sooner.
p.s buy it on a cashback site and keep the money.

suburburban · 01/04/2026 19:46

Differentforgirls · 01/04/2026 18:10

So does just washing them.

you still have to stop and put things away if no one else is drying up

depends what you are used to but having a dishwasher is important to me

I still wash pans