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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel quite put out about MIL’s 60th weekend?

590 replies

CotswoldConundrum · 16/04/2026 18:05

DH’s mother is having a 60th at a very well-known luxury hotel (the sort that does back-to-back weddings), with 100+ guests. Absolutely fine in itself, but it’s turning into a full-scale production that we seem to have been quietly allocated roles in.

We’ve been told we’re “down” for the entire weekend (Friday drinks, Saturday black tie dinner, Sunday brunch) rather than actually asked. The hotel is about 2 hours away and rooms are £280 per night with a two-night minimum as part of the “package,” plus £95pp for the dinner itself.

We have two DC (7 and 4), and MIL has been quite clear it’s strictly adults-only as she doesn’t want children “disrupting the ambience,” which I do understand in principle, but it does mean we’re expected to arrange (and pay for) two nights of childcare on top of everything else.

She’s also circulated a “look” for the weekend — muted tones only as she wants everything to feel “cohesive” in photos. I mentioned a dress I already own and she said it might be “a bit much,” which I did find slightly… odd.

We’ve now seen a draft seating plan and DH and I are on completely different tables as she wants to “mix families,” again fine, but it would have been nice to be asked rather than just told.

On top of that, DH has been told he’ll be doing a speech, and I’ve been asked if I can “help coordinate things on the day” so it all runs smoothly (apparently I’m “so organised”).

There’s also been quite a bit of emphasis on it being a “special milestone,” with comments about close family “making an effort” with gifts, which hasn’t exactly been subtle.

By the time we factor in hotel, dinner, childcare, outfits etc., it’s looking at the best part of £800–£1k for the weekend.

DH thinks this is all perfectly normal for a big birthday and that I’m overthinking it, but I can’t help feeling it’s quite a lot to dictate to people rather than just invite them.

AIBU to feel a bit put out?

OP posts:
Shinyandnew1 · 16/04/2026 19:39

CotswoldConundrum · 16/04/2026 18:57

if it was just me I probably would simplify it.

I think part of the difficulty is that it would create quite a bit of friction if we didn’t attend as expected. DH is very much of the view that we should just go along with it for the sake of keeping the peace, particularly as it’s a milestone birthday.

I suspect we’ll end up going, I’m just trying to work out what feels reasonable in terms of how much we commit to.

Edited

If you’re going to ‘probably end up going’, then you’re committed to all of it, aren’t you?!

tinyladybird · 16/04/2026 19:39

What a diva! Is she usually like this?

Chilly80 · 16/04/2026 19:39

CotswoldConundrum · 16/04/2026 18:39

We could leave them with my mum, which is what we’d usually do for anything overnight, but she’s a few hours away so it does then turn into quite a lot of extra travelling either side of the weekend.

By the time we factor that in, it’s not just the cost but also the logistics of getting everyone there and back, which is partly why it’s feeling a bit more involved than a straightforward evening event.

I would say your mum can only have them Saturday night so you'll take them there Sat afternoon getting you out of all the errands you'll no doubt be expected to do then leave as early as you want Sunday to collect them.

SpiceGirlsNeedAComeBack · 16/04/2026 19:41

Christ, she has main character syndrome! How awfully ridiculous.

Fantomfartflinger · 16/04/2026 19:41

The mil should pay for everything and allow children. It could be a little bit smaller and she pays it all. It is soooo rude to expect other people to fund themselves to celebrate your birthday.

Octavia64 · 16/04/2026 19:42

My in laws used to pull this sort of shit.

honestly after the first couple I worked out it really wasn’t enjoyable at all and encouraged dh to go on his own.

it did help that some of the others had kids and started pushing back on the no kids as well so there were more of us who were unhappy about it,

twenty years on it’s picnic in the park bring your own food which frankly is more my style (there’s 13 grandkids now).

BeaLola · 16/04/2026 19:42

Wow - sympathies - sounds a bit full on. I would also not be expecting to pay for dinner- if she wants a big do should she not be paying or her DH . I think you lost me at muted clothing theme - I hope she’s not always like this. ?

Channellingsophistication · 16/04/2026 19:44

That is way over the top for a birthday celebration! I think if it was me, I would suddenly be unwell that weekend. And her son to give a speech ! Presumably to say how wonderful she is? And a bit sad that she doesn't want her grandchildren there.

Poppy61 · 16/04/2026 19:44

We wouldn't be able to afford it, so would have to politely decline. It doesn't sound as if you will be given much time to enjoy the weekend either. She's trying to rope you in as free labour. If you go, you go as a guest and enjoy yourself!

Yellowpapersun · 16/04/2026 19:46

My 60th was a family dinner in my favourite restaurant, 8 of us, just me and close family. It was wonderful and I can't see that your MIL's circus could be any better. She sounds like a self-centred nightmare and she needs to grow up! I'd be tempted to have diplomatic chicken pox at the last minute.

Jobseeker2026 · 16/04/2026 19:48

If I’m paying £95 for a meal I would be sitting with my partner, if she’s paying £95 for my meal then I would be more willing to make small talk.

k1233 · 16/04/2026 19:48

Black tie is as boring as anything for young kids. They'd much prefer a weekend with your mum.

The repeated reference to "the photos" would irritate me. You're not toys to dress as she pleases.

The least stressful for you would be to embrace the weekend and enjoy yourself. You can have a nice time away with your husband. If you make it in to a drama, that's only really impacting you. Is it worth it?

Winter2020 · 16/04/2026 19:48

CotswoldConundrum · 16/04/2026 18:26

I wouldn’t say “minted” as such, no — we’re comfortable, but very much within reason.

DH’s family are certainly more used to that sort of spending than I am, and MIL does like things done properly, so I think that’s where some of this is coming from.

It’s not so much that we can’t afford it, more that it’s quite a significant outlay for something that doesn’t feel especially optional.

To me "done properly" would be MIL paying for everyone's meals and close families hotel rooms. I understand that would cost a fortune and that is why most people wouldn't celebrate a birthday on the scale of a wedding - because they don't want to spend 25K on it.

Your MIL should choose her birthday plans according to her budget and not push the costs of her huge do onto her guests.

That being said it doesn't help your position! I would probably say I'm not willing to be away from the children all weekend or leave them with strangers and so I'll just attend the Saturday evening party. Would your parents be willing to have a weekend away with you locally to the "wedding" and then be left with the children Saturday evening? Your husband can please himself and flit between the groups if he wishes.

BrickBiscuit · 16/04/2026 19:49

CotswoldConundrum · 16/04/2026 18:39

We could leave them with my mum, which is what we’d usually do for anything overnight, but she’s a few hours away so it does then turn into quite a lot of extra travelling either side of the weekend.

By the time we factor that in, it’s not just the cost but also the logistics of getting everyone there and back, which is partly why it’s feeling a bit more involved than a straightforward evening event.

So neither in-laws nor grandchildren are wanted? And guests only have their drinks covered? She's tight as well as a narcissist. She sounds like a pig. I'd just show up around minimal bought-in childcare, maybe to watch DH's speech, and miss the rest.

IDontHateRainbows · 16/04/2026 19:49

Id be turning up in the least 'muted' dress I could possibly find, bright colours, maybe a slightly inappropriate thigh cleavage and a fantastic OTT hat to top.it off. Pretend you read it wrong and thought she didn't want muted attire.

Offherrockingchair · 16/04/2026 19:50

I’d grow a backbone and say no. Let your DH sort it, it’s his mum!

mondaytosunday · 16/04/2026 19:50

It doesn’t matter that she wants Friday night drinks to be the start of the weekend. Her son will be there and due to your children not being invited you can only come for the Saturday evening and Sunday brunch. Not that I think the kids would enjoy it anyway . However I could see this as being a totally different scenario if ‘immediate family’ didn’t include you, as we have seen in recent posts!
How does your partner feel about it?

Shinyandnew1 · 16/04/2026 19:52

She wants a massive wedding-sized birthday party but whereas with a wedding you cover the cost of everyone’s meals, she is expecting the guests to fork out for themselves! It really doesn’t reflect well on her, does it?!

JazzyAmbs · 16/04/2026 19:52

Is she an influencer for the silver generation? She’ll be asking for a free birthday cake next in return for insta posts!

Tabbers79 · 16/04/2026 19:57

ChatGPT strikes again!

Purplecatshopaholic · 16/04/2026 19:57

All that time with MIL and family sounds like my idea of hell tbh, and I wouldn’t be going, let alone paying for the privilege, lol. She does sound like my (thankfully ex) MIL who starred in her own productions wherever possible, aided and abetted by her sons btw. Hell. On. Earth.. The various DILs all got together and we all got quietly drunk, lol

Kitt1 · 16/04/2026 19:58

Ugh! I’d refuse to attend for the entire weekend. Maybe just go for the main dinner?
I can’t be doing with organised faffing and how can she not want her grandchildren there???

For my 60th birthday we went on a city break and two of our adult DC chose to come too. There was no coercion. It was lovely and lots of fun.

godmum56 · 16/04/2026 20:00

CotswoldConundrum · 16/04/2026 18:15

Not all the guests, no — it seems to be more of an expectation for immediate family.

From what I understand, a lot of people are just coming for the Saturday evening, but MIL has said she’d like “close family there for the whole thing” as it will feel more “special” (and look better in photos).

I think that’s part of what’s making me hesitate — it’s not being presented as optional in the way it seems to be for others.

well she can want what she likes.....as my Mum used to say "I wants never gets"

godmum56 · 16/04/2026 20:03

CotswoldConundrum · 16/04/2026 18:57

if it was just me I probably would simplify it.

I think part of the difficulty is that it would create quite a bit of friction if we didn’t attend as expected. DH is very much of the view that we should just go along with it for the sake of keeping the peace, particularly as it’s a milestone birthday.

I suspect we’ll end up going, I’m just trying to work out what feels reasonable in terms of how much we commit to.

Edited

usual MN thing, sounds like you have a DH problem to me.

Cakeandcardio · 16/04/2026 20:08

For a 60th birthday, I would expect the MIL / FIL to take immediate family out for dinner and for them to pay (this is what I would do).
She sounds completely up her own arse.

It sounds like you might have to suck it up as your husband is on board but your feelings are very very understandable.