He Fixed One Printer For Free, Then His Neighbor Turned Him Into The Building’s Unpaid IT Guy

Working from home already blurs the line between personal space and professional time. For one software engineer, that line didn’t just blur, it disappeared completely after a single good deed.

What started as a quick, harmless favor for a neighbor turned into an unexpected flood of requests, interruptions, and assumptions that his time was somehow… public property.

At first, it was manageable. A knock here, a quick question there. But when those small asks turned into a steady stream of strangers expecting free tech support during his workday, things started to feel less like neighborly kindness and more like unpaid labor.

And when he finally said no, the backlash was immediate.

He Fixed One Printer for Free, Then His Neighbor Turned Him Into the Building’s Unpaid IT Guy
Not the actual photo

Here’s the original post:

'AITA for refusing to fix my neighbor’s laptop for free after he told everyone in the building I’m the neighborhood IT guy?'

I’m a software engineer, and I work from home. My neighbor, an older guy who lives two floors down,

asked me a few months ago for help setting up his printer. It took me ten minutes, and I didn't mind doing a neighborly favor.

The problem is that he apparently went on a crusade telling everyone in our 20-unit building that I’m a tech genius who helps everyone for free.

Suddenly, I had people knocking on my door during my work hours asking me to fix cracked phone screens, recover deleted photos, or speed up their 10-year-old laptops.

I started saying no, explaining that I’m a developer, not a repair shop, and that I’m actually working when I'm at my desk.

Well, my neighbor came up yesterday with his laptop, which was literally falling apart, and insisted I take a look.

When I told him I wasn't doing tech support anymore and that he should take it to a professional shop, he got offended.

He told me I’m being neighborly-challenged and that since I'm just sitting at a computer all day anyway, it shouldn't be a big deal to help a friend.

I told him we aren't friends, we're neighbors, and my professional time isn't a public resource.

A few months ago, the situation was simple. His neighbor, an older man living a couple floors down, needed help setting up a printer. It took ten minutes. No stress, no expectations, just a straightforward favor between neighbors.

That should have been the end of it.

Instead, it became the beginning of something much bigger.

Unbeknownst to him, the neighbor had been enthusiastically spreading the word throughout their 20-unit building.

Not just that he was helpful, but that he was basically a “tech genius” who fixed things for free. It wasn’t framed as a one-time favor. It sounded like a service.

And people listened.

Soon, there were knocks on his door at all hours. Not just quick printer setups either. People came with cracked phone screens, ancient laptops, lost photos, and vague complaints like “it’s just slow.”

The requests weren’t occasional. They started interrupting his actual workday.

That’s when things shifted from mildly annoying to genuinely disruptive.

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He began turning people away, politely at first. He explained that he was a software engineer, not a repair technician, and that working from home still meant working.

But the message didn’t fully land. Some neighbors seemed confused, others a little irritated, like he was refusing something he had already agreed to offer.

The real breaking point came when the original neighbor showed up again.

This time, it wasn’t a quick fix. The laptop he brought was, in his own words, “literally falling apart.” This wasn’t a ten-minute favor. It was a full repair job, the kind that professionals charge for.

So he said no.

He told him clearly that he wasn’t doing tech support anymore and suggested taking it to a proper repair shop. That should have been reasonable. Instead, it sparked a confrontation.

The neighbor accused him of not being “neighborly” and dismissed his job entirely with the classic line, “you’re just sitting at a computer all day anyway.”

From his perspective, this wasn’t a big ask. From the engineer’s perspective, it was yet another boundary being ignored.

That’s when the response got sharper.

He told him they weren’t friends, just neighbors, and that his professional time wasn’t a public resource.

It’s a blunt statement, but also an honest one.

And that’s where the tension really lies. The neighbor seems to view help as something communal and freely given, especially when it appears easy or quick. The engineer, on the other hand, sees his skills as part of his profession, something that takes time, focus, and effort, even if it looks simple from the outside.

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There’s also a common misunderstanding at play here. People often assume that if someone works with computers, they can fix anything tech-related.

But software engineering and hardware repair are very different skill sets. It’s like asking a surgeon to fix your broken glasses just because they both involve precision.

More importantly, there’s the issue of consent.

Helping once doesn’t mean agreeing forever. And it definitely doesn’t mean agreeing to help an entire building for free, especially without being asked.

What makes this situation frustrating isn’t just the requests themselves, but how they were created. The neighbor didn’t just ask for help.

He volunteered someone else’s time and skills without permission, then acted surprised when that generosity didn’t extend indefinitely.

And once that expectation was set, it became harder to undo.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Many people shared similar experiences, especially those working in tech, where a single favor quickly snowballs into ongoing unpaid support. 

SatoriNamast3 − NTA Entitled neighbour who has no concept of someone just doing a good deed, announces at the roof tops that OP is a repair shop.

OP stands ground and entitled neighbor gets offended.   With people like this, you give an inch and they take a mile.

Good thing OP that you set the boundary. Going to have to keep maintaining that boundary.

Might need to build a moat.

Lumisteria − "Just sitting at a computer all day", yeah, which is why you may want to do, like, something else? NTA.

It's pretty common for people working with computers to be asked a lot of service from friends and family, it is ok to put some boundaries about that.

chameleonsEverywhere − Holy s__t, NTA.

I'd have trouble containing my rage at someone who not only expects free tech support but also advertises my free services to other neighbors.

Especially since I am working from home (emphasis on the word WORKING).

Others pointed out the risk of liability, once you touch someone’s device, you can end up being blamed for future problems.

Appropriate-Mall9781 − NTA. .. I feel this in my soul. What's worse is, in some jurisdictions,

they can try and hold you liable for whatever they did by saying it happened after you touched the device.

ordinaryhorse − He’s very generous with other people’s time and resources. Definitely NTA

DealerAlarmed3632 − I used to be a professional musician. The number of times I was asked by family to play holidays/events for experience/exposure/love of art is ridiculous.

Set the boundary early and often. This sort of free labor for an adjacent discipline is b__lshit. NTA.

A common theme was clear: boundaries aren’t rude, they’re necessary. Especially when someone else keeps volunteering your time for you.

Ok-Rock2345 − NTA and I feel for you. Backe when my parents were alive I started to hate visiting them because my dad would turn every visit into a helpdesk...

I finally told them I would not come by anymore unless the stopped doing that. The funny part is I was just a web designer.

I know how to put a computer together, bit I am not a support specialist. I can only imagine what it would be like having neighbors dropping

by at a times *expecting and demanding* I fix their computers. Probably the best way to handle that is start charging them to take a look.

ASentientRailgun − This is why I lie to neighbors about what I do for a living.

Edit: NTA because once you fix it, they blame you for every problem after. One trip to small claims court was enough for me, thank you.

PuzzleheadedPea6980 − Have an adult conversation and say "look, I dont mind helping from time to time,

but when you keep telling everyone I do it FOR FREE obviously the whole building will. show up.

Since I helped you that one time, its become a full time job telling people no.

Next time someone does you a favor like that, dont tell everyone its free, because tat the end of the day, its up to me to decide if you get...

CompetitiveBody416 − NTA AT ALL! crazy that they just expect you to fix their falling apart laptops just because you are a software engineer.

At the heart of this story is a simple but important idea. Kindness should be a choice, not an obligation.

Helping a neighbor once is a generous act. Being expected to help everyone, anytime, for free, is something else entirely. The moment a favor turns into an expectation, it stops feeling like kindness and starts feeling like pressure.

Maybe the real lesson here is that setting boundaries early isn’t unfriendly. It’s what keeps good intentions from turning into long-term frustration.

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So what do you think? Was he right to shut it down, or could he have handled it differently without burning bridges?

 

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