He Locked Her Out Of Her Own Disney+ Account. Now Their Friends Think She Overreacted.

It started as a normal roommate situation. Two people in their late twenties, splitting rent, cooking dinners together, binge-watching shows after work. It even felt balanced.

She covered the streaming services because she already had them. He picked up takeout sometimes. Nobody was keeping score.

He Locked Her Out of Her Own Disney+ Account. Now Their Friends Think She Overreacted.
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Here’s The Original Post:

AITA for kicking him off my disney plus?

I (27F) used to share a two-bedroom apartment with “Mark” (28M). We met through mutual friends, hit it off, and decided to room together to save money.

At first, it was great. We’d cook together, binge shows, split groceries without drama.

I paid for most of the streaming services because I already had them: Netflix, Spotify family, and Disney+.

He’d occasionally cover takeout or grab cleaning supplies. It felt balanced enough.

The issue started when I decided not to renew the lease.

Living with him became exhausting. He’d leave dishes “to soak” for days. He’d invite people over without warning.

The final straw was when he borrowed money twice and needed multiple reminders to pay me back.

Nothing huge, just constant little things that made me realize I didn’t want to keep living like that.

When I told him I was moving out at the end of the lease, he didn’t take it well.

He accused me of “abandoning” him and said I was screwing him over financially.

I gave him three months’ notice, but apparently that wasn’t enough. Things got tense. We stopped hanging out.

After I moved into my own place, I changed some passwords out of habit. Or at least I thought I did.

A week later, I tried logging into my Disney+ and couldn’t.

Wrong password.

I reset it using my email. A few minutes later, I got logged out again.

Confused, I checked the account settings — the recovery email had been changed.

To his.

I texted him.

Me: “Did you change the login on my Disney+?”

Him: “Well, yeah. You changed all the vibes when you moved out.”

Me: “It’s my account. I pay for it.”

Him: “You kicked me out of your life. I figured I’d keep the one thing I still had.”

I wish I were joking.

He said if I wanted the password back, we needed to “have a real conversation” about “fixing our friendship.”

He literally said, “If you can’t be my friend, at least let me keep Disney+.”

So yes. He essentially locked me out of my own account and tried to leverage it to force me into staying friends.

I contacted customer support, verified my billing info, and got the account restored.

Then I removed all devices and changed the password to something he’d never guess.

After that, I blocked him everywhere.

Now some of our mutual friends are saying I went too far.

They say I could’ve just let him keep the profile since it’s “only like $7 a month” and that blocking him was dramatic.

One of them said I “lied” because I told him we’d talk just to get him to give me access before I went through support.

For clarity: I did say, “Fine, we can talk,” because I wanted him to stop messing with the account long enough for me to fix it. I never intended to...

So AITA for kicking him off and blocking him after he tried to hold my own account hostage?

Until she decided not to renew the lease.

She did not leave dramatically. No screaming match. No slammed doors. Just the slow realization that living with him was draining. Dishes sat in the sink for days.

Guests appeared without warning. Small loans required multiple reminders. Nothing catastrophic, just a steady drip of inconsideration that made her picture another year and feel tired.

She gave him three months’ notice. He called it abandonment.

After she moved out, things were quiet for about a week. Then she tried logging into her Disney+.

Wrong password.

She reset it using her email. A few minutes later, she was logged out again. When she checked the account settings, the recovery email had been changed.

To his.

That was the moment things stopped being awkward and started being absurd.

When she texted him, he admitted it casually. He said she had “changed all the vibes” by moving out, so he figured he would keep the one thing he still had. If she wanted the password back, they needed to have a “real conversation” about fixing their friendship.

He was holding her own account hostage. Over Disney+.

It sounds petty on the surface. Seven dollars a month. A streaming service with cartoons and Marvel movies. But the money was never the point.

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The point was entitlement.

They were never dating. This was not a breakup. She simply chose not to continue living with someone who stressed her out. Yet he treated her decision like a personal betrayal that justified retaliation.

Changing the password was not about access to TV shows. It was about control. It was a small, digital way to say, You do not get to walk away without consequences.

And when he demanded a conversation in exchange for access, he crossed from petty into manipulative.

She told him, “Fine, we can talk,” just to buy enough time to regain control of the account through customer support.

She verified her billing information, restored access, removed every device, and changed the password to something he would never guess.

Then she blocked him everywhere.

To her, it was simple. If someone tries to blackmail you into maintaining a friendship, they are no longer your friend.

But mutual friends disagreed.

Some said she overreacted. That she could have just let him keep a profile. That it was “only seven dollars.” One accused her of lying because she pretended to agree to talk in order to secure access before cutting him off.

This is where the situation becomes less about streaming services and more about boundaries.

It is easy to minimize small violations. A borrowed sweater. A shared password. A leftover subscription. But those small things reveal how someone views you.

Was he entitled to something she paid for simply because they once shared a kitchen? Was she obligated to maintain emotional access to keep digital peace?

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Friendships, like leases, expire. They change shape. They drift. Healthy adults accept that. They do not retaliate by hijacking login credentials.

As for the “lie,” there is a difference between deceiving someone for gain and disengaging from someone who is actively manipulating you.

He had already shown he was willing to leverage her property for emotional bargaining. Expecting honesty in that exchange feels almost naive.

What really unsettled her was not losing a roommate. It was realizing that someone she once trusted felt justified in punishing her for independence.

Reddit had plenty to say about this one.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Most commenters were blunt. He tried to block her from an account she pays for. That is not miscommunication. That is theft. 

Rainbow_dreaming − Lol, he has a brass neck! He tried to block you from the account you pay for. What a cheeky sod! NTA!

Thediciplematt − NTA He blocked you off your own account? The one you pay for? This guy is nuts… tried to blackmail you into being friends.

PsychologyAutomatic3 − NTA. He lost all possible consideration when he locked you out of your account.

The mutuals that think you’re an AH should feel free to give him access to their Disney Plus account.

Several people joked that any mutual friend defending him is welcome to hand over their own Disney+ password instead. 

sswishbone − NTA - he stole your account, you took it back and blocked him.

Tell your friends and he's a thief and if they want to be friends with a thief, they're no friends of yours

peach-bellinis − Wow. I’m speechless. NTA. Why is he causing all of this drama over a $7/month streaming service?!

He was never entitled to your account even when you were roommates/friends, and he burned his own bridge when he changed your password

DamnItGoAway − NTA Seems to me that he only wanted to stay friends with you for the Disney+ access.

I would've done the same thing. He may have apologized for being a horrible roommate but he's still a toxic friend.

CakePhool − NTA. The mutual friends can pay for his Disney plus. What was he thinking?

Blocking you for using your own streaming service that you pay for?

There is no logic to that. He forced you say you would be friends or your wouldnt gotten the password. That isnt fair either.

Others pointed out the obvious irony. If he wants Disney+, he can subscribe like everyone else.

sweetteasnake − NTA- if he wants Disney Plus, he can go ahead and subscribe to it himself. What a mooch!

LizGeer − You are paying. He doesn't have any right to use it. Nta.

Judgement_Bot_AITA − OP has offered the following explanation for why they think they might be the a__hole:

I blocked and threw him out and lied about wanting to be his friend again to do so Help keep the sub engaging! #Don’t downvote assholes!

Sometimes the smallest conflicts reveal the biggest truths. A password change can expose resentment, entitlement, and a need for control. She did not end a friendship over a cartoon catalog. She ended it because someone tried to hold her hostage, even in a tiny way.

Seven dollars is cheap. Peace of mind is not.

Was blocking him dramatic, or was it simply drawing a line where it should have been drawn the moment he changed the email?

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