Couple Refuses Surprisingly Bold Request From Near Stranger After Hosting Festive Gathering

A couple in their 30s opened their home for a lively Friendsgiving with 20 community friends. An acquaintance they had met only once showed up two hours late with her husband, forcing everyone to delay dinner slightly. The very next day she asked to borrow the hosts’ entire setup for her own separate gathering to which the original hosts were not invited.

A full year passed with no contact until the same woman reached out again with the identical bold request. The couple politely refused both times, explaining they needed their items for their own family Thanksgiving, yet they now question whether turning her down makes them wrong.

A Redditor refuses to lend their full Friendsgiving setup to a late-arriving acquaintance.

Couple Refuses Surprisingly Bold Request From Near Stranger After Hosting Festive Gathering
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for saying an acquaintance can’t borrow my entire Thanksgiving setup?'

We (30s) have hosted a Friendsgiving at our home for a few years with about 20 friends from our community.

Last year, a friend of a friend (an acquaintance that we met once briefly at a gathering) reached out to me a few days before the event

and asked if she and her husband (40s) could come. I said sure! They’re notoriously hours late to everything and said they’d bring appetizers.

Sure enough, two hours after everyone else was there, she reached out to me for my address (they live two minutes away and everyone else is at our house often).

We had to hold off on dinner until they arrived, and it was a little awkward, but no big deal.

The next day, this person reaches out to me and asks if she can borrow our table, chairs, plates, silverware, wine glasses, and decorations

for a Friendsgiving that they’re hosting the next day (that we obviously weren’t invited to)!!

I was pretty put off, and didn’t want to deal with having to arrange the logistics of that as they don’t even have a car that can transport the table,...

I said that no, we were bringing a lot of the stuff to my parent’s gathering for Thanksgiving. I didn’t hear anything from her after that.

Now, after not running into them or hearing from them for a whole year, she just asked again if they can borrow our stuff!

AITA for saying no last year, and WIBTA if I say no again??

Edit since so many people mentioned it: they were two hours late to the party itself.

Lots of cocktails and mingling to be had before dinner. We held off maybe another 15 minutes

once the turkey was ready to serve and they walked in as folks were sitting down for dinner.

The core issue here boils down to mismatched expectations in casual social circles: one side sees a generous host, while the other spots an opportunity for a free upgrade.

The acquaintance’s repeated requests, especially after showing up late and not being invited back, come across as presumptuous, turning a one-time kindness into an expectation of ongoing favors.

Many would feel put off by the logistics alone. Transporting heavy items without a proper car isn’t a small ask.

On the flip side, some might argue that in tight-knit communities, sharing resources builds bonds, especially around holidays when not everyone has the means to host fully.

Yet the one-sided nature stands out: the couple arrived late enough to delay dinner slightly, contributed minimally, and then sought to replicate the entire experience elsewhere without reciprocity.

This highlights a common social dynamic where “acquaintance” status gets blurred into “entitled friend” territory, leaving hosts feeling used rather than appreciated.

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Broadening the lens, family and friend dynamics around favors often reveal deeper patterns in how we navigate relationships.

Research from the American Time Use Survey shows that most people engage in daily social interactions, but these are frequently with closer circles, and overextending to casual contacts can lead to burnout.

Studies on social connections indicate that while people maintain dozens of acquaintances, meaningful exchanges thrive on mutuality, not one-way borrowing.

Licensed psychologist Jordan Fiorillo Scotti emphasizes the importance of clear limits: she notes in discussions around relational health that “boundaries are the limits and rules we set for ourselves and others in relationships.” This directly applies here, as saying no protects personal resources and emotional energy without needing to over-explain or feel guilty.

Neutral advice? A simple, firm response like “Sorry, we can’t lend out our setup this time” works wonders, no elaborate excuses required. If the pattern continues, politely declining further contact preserves peace. Healthy relationships, even casual ones, should feel reciprocal, not extractive.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Some people state that the requester is rude and unbelievably entitled for asking to borrow an entire kitchen and dining setup.

eowynsheiress − This person is unbelievably rude. If you don’t have table chairs, plates, and glasses, you cannot host. Period.

Borrowing one small item or a folding table is one thing. To borrow an entire kitchen and dining room is another, unspeakably rude thing.

Please block this person with alacrity and move on without a second thought! Clearly you are NTA.

Some people suggest simply ignoring the request, blocking the person, or not responding at all.

[Reddit User] − The only thing they should be allowed to borrow is cooth.

FormSuccessful1122 − I wouldn’t even respond.

AlexNKarlie − Just say, “who are you?” And ignore it

Some people emphasize that the OP was right not to accommodate the latecomers or change plans for them.

Zscalerrguy − No, not the AH. You also didn’t need to delay serving anything. It’s their own fault for being late.

United_Gift3028 − Why would you make everyone else wait for dinner because of these fools? That's my takeaway.

Some people view the person as clearly trying to use the OP and advise having no further contact.

Snug_The_Cat − NTA this woman is clearly just trying to use you.

AssignmentRelevant72 − If you say no and she never speaks to you again... so what?

ProfessorDistinct835 − NTA. Perhaps she'd also like you to cook for the Friendsgiving you're not invited to?

FatterThanIThinkIAm − I can’t imagine how people have the balls to call near-strangers and ask if they can come to a party. There’s no shortage of nerve there!

In the end, the Redditor’s polite refusal seems like a smart move to keep their own gatherings stress-free. Do you think saying no was fair, or should they have helped the acquaintance? How do you handle bold favor requests from near-strangers? Share your hot takes below!

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