He Refused To Use His Realtor Girlfriend To Buy A House, And Now She’s Furious

Buying a house is stressful enough without turning it into a relationship power struggle.

A 38-year-old man recently found himself in the middle of exactly that after deciding not to use his girlfriend, a former realtor, to help purchase his new home on Long Island.

What sounded like a practical decision quickly spiraled into hurt feelings, silence, and accusations that he had delivered a personal insult.

And honestly, the conflict seems to be less about real estate and more about everything happening underneath it.

He Refused to Use His Realtor Girlfriend to Buy a House, and Now She’s Furious
Not the actual photo

Here’s the original post:

'AITAH? I 38m am not using my 31f gf (former realtor) to buy a house?'

Two years ago, I hired my current gf as an employee of our finance company.

We are still together and she changed companies to avoid HR issues.

I am ready to buy a home. I know many realtors since I work in finance and real estate. She is no longer a realtor but still works in finance.

I told her I want us both to go shopping for a home and a good friend of mine with do the leg work.

She will find homes we like and we can both go pick one together.

She says this is a “kick in the ass” bc she has her license still. But she can’t gain access to homes unless she pays for a lockbox service.

My gf also has two parents over the age of 70 and one has terminal cancer.

She started the new job and helps her parents. I wanted to go away for our anniversary but she said “when am I going to visit my dad?”.

So I initially thought it would make sense to let someone else find us homes and

she can be the client with me, since she has a lot going on in her personal life too.

She wants me to lookup homes for hours and pick a bunch. I DO NOT WANT THIS. I want someone to send me a list I can skim through.

I am a busy man at work and my days are full with the same b__lshit. I don’t want to go home and still think about real estate.

Now she won’t speak with me and she is upset. I’m buying this home on Long Island and

just want someone to send me a list of nice homes in my price range. I don’t want to have to do the work after work. AITAH?

The couple has been together for two years. Ironically, they met because he originally hired her to work at his finance company.

Eventually, she switched jobs to avoid HR complications, though she still works in finance and technically still holds her real estate license.

Now he is preparing to buy a home.

Since he works in finance and real estate, he already knows plenty of active agents.

His plan was simple: let one of his realtor friends handle the search process, send listings that fit his budget and preferences, and then he and his girlfriend could tour the homes together and decide as a couple.

To him, it sounded efficient.

To her, it sounded like a “kick in the ass.”

Part of the issue is that although she still has her license, she is no longer actively working as a realtor.

She would need to pay for services like lockbox access to properly show homes again. At the same time, her personal life is already overwhelming.

Both of her parents are over 70, and her father has terminal cancer. She recently started a new job while also helping care for her family.

See also  Paralympic Medalist Devastated After Sister’s Friends Drink Her Victory Champagne

The boyfriend thought outsourcing the home search would actually reduce pressure on her.

She clearly did not see it that way.

Instead, she wanted the two of them to search listings together manually, spending hours browsing homes online and narrowing choices themselves. He hated the idea immediately.

According to his post, he already spends his workdays buried in finance and real estate problems. The last thing he wants after work is more research, more listings, and more decisions.

He wants someone else to do the tedious filtering and simply send him a clean list of viable homes.

Which, to be fair, is literally why many people hire realtors in the first place.

Still, the emotional side of the argument is what made Reddit split into deeper discussions. On the surface, it sounds like a disagreement about logistics. Underneath, though, it feels more personal.

His girlfriend may hear: “I don’t trust you with something important.”

Meanwhile, he seems to mean: “I don’t want to overload you while also protecting my own sanity.”

Those are two very different conversations.

A lot of commenters pointed out that mixing romantic relationships with financial transactions can become messy fast.

If anything goes wrong during the buying process, the emotional fallout often lasts longer than the paperwork.

Others focused on her current emotional state. Watching a parent slowly decline from terminal illness changes people.

Even ordinary disagreements can feel bigger because grief makes emotions raw and unpredictable.

Psychologists often refer to this as anticipatory grief, the emotional process of mourning someone before they are gone.

See also  A “Girls’ Trip” Turned Into A Group Vacation, Now He’s Being Asked To Share A Room

According to Verywell Mind, people experiencing anticipatory grief may become more emotionally reactive, anxious, or controlling because they are struggling with uncertainty and helplessness in another area of life.

The article explains that grief before a loss often creates emotional exhaustion long before the actual bereavement begins.

Similarly, Psychology Today notes that adults caring for aging or terminally ill parents frequently experience chronic stress and emotional overload, which can spill into romantic relationships and everyday decision-making.

That context does not necessarily mean she is right. But it may explain why this decision hit her harder than expected.

At the same time, many readers thought the boyfriend’s wording revealed another problem: tone.

Several commenters felt he framed the situation very practically while completely missing the emotional significance for her.

To him, hiring a realtor is outsourcing labor. To her, it may feel like being excluded from a major life milestone she expected to share professionally and personally.

There is also the uncomfortable financial question hanging in the background. Real estate commissions are substantial.

Some commenters suspected she may have viewed helping with the purchase as both participation and income opportunity, even if nobody openly admitted it.

But the biggest thing readers agreed on was this: neither of them seems to be communicating the real issue directly.

He keeps talking about efficiency and workload.

She keeps reacting emotionally to what sounds like rejection.

Those conversations are not actually connecting.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Some commenters warned against ever mixing romance and business, especially with major financial decisions like buying property.

See also  Did She Ruin Her Own Vacation? Inviting Overbearing In-Laws To Disney Goes Wrong

No-Question249 − NTA, never ever ever mix business and pleasure.

Never have a relative be your lawyer, realtor, or doctor. Hire a professional.

neemicat − If she wants to earn commission then she needs to do the work.

Overall-Design-3993 − You are not the a__hole. She's being really unreasonable. Maybe this is a sign that you shouldn't get a house with her.

Others felt the girlfriend’s reaction was probably tied to the emotional pressure of caring for a terminally ill parent rather than just the house itself.ProfessionalYam3119 − There is no reason for her to insist on this. Real estate agents should be objective, and she is far from being that.

mechshark − Nta, sounds like she’s just being a pain in the ass. I wouldn’t sweat it just tell her when u get your list of homes imo lol

blue-bottleFly − Don't employ someone so personally close. If the transaction gets gliitched, you can't separate the resentment.

One commenter summed it up neatly: “The bigger issue is probably communication and tone, not the realtor decision.”UnPracticed_Pagan − NTA

That sounds exhausting

lilacflutter_ − The bigger issue is probably communication/tone not the actual realtor decision

I_need_a_date_plz − Are you buying a home with her? Or is this your own personal home?

Because if this is your home and you two are not married, she needs

to mind her business about how you are electing to proceed with a home purchase.

If you two are both buying this home, she needs to understand she can’t do it all while having to look after personal s__t.

It’s also a really bad idea to buy a home with someone you are not married to.

DogsNSnow − NTA. Do you think that having a conversation with her, where you lay out all the points you’ve mentioned above would be helpful?

I know typical Reddit advice is a knee-jerk “maybe you should break up”,

and sometimes that’s necessary, but I don’t think that’s true of this situation.

The reality is that your gf is possibly not thinking about this clearly due to other pressures in her life.

She’s facing the imminent loss of a parent and is probably deep in anticipatory grief.

She’s likely looking at her mom and wondering what kind of new/increased supports will be needed in the aftermath and through the rest of her life.

The process of caring for aging parents is very hard. There are a lot of unknowns with a parent approaching the end of their life,

and it can be terrifying to not feel like there’s a plan or like you have any control.

If your gf is feeling that way, it’s natural for her to try and claw back control in other parts of her life.

But that’s not to say this is a good idea, just that it’s understandable.

I think sitting down with her and having a frank and truthful but caring and love-centred conversation may be helpful.

Gently explain to her that you are using a realtor as you don’t want her to take on even more than she already has on her plate.

It would also be ideal to start the conversation about getting her professional supports to

help her through the process of slowly watching her parent succumb to cancer.

Starting now would be very helpful for her as this progresses and in the aftermath of the coming loss,

so that she has the ability to be there to support her mother.

This never really sounded like a fight about lockbox access or Zillow listings.

It sounded like two exhausted people carrying completely different emotional burdens and accidentally stepping on each other while trying to move forward together.

The boyfriend wanted simplicity and less stress. The girlfriend may have wanted reassurance that she still mattered in the process.

And when those needs collided, a house hunt suddenly became a relationship problem.

Was he being practical, or did he unintentionally shut her out of something meaningful?

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2026 cuanhua | All rights reserved