Man Refused To Drive An Extra 20 Minutes After A Female Friend Didn’t Want To Be Alone With Him

What’s the right call when you’re asked to drive out of your way to accommodate someone’s personal comfort, but it doesn’t make sense for you?

That’s the dilemma one man faced when his friend’s acquaintance, Amy, refused to ride in the car alone with him, citing safety concerns because he was a man she didn’t know well. Amy asked him to take a longer route, making it a nearly 30-minute detour just to drop her off.

The man, already facing a long drive back home, refused the request, leaving Amy upset. Was his refusal reasonable, or was he wrong for not accommodating her request to feel safer? Read on to see how this situation played out and whether the man was out of line.

A man refuses to drive a longer route to drop off a girl who doesn’t want to be alone with him, causing tension with his friends

Man Refused To Drive An Extra 20 Minutes After A Female Friend Didn’t Want To Be Alone With Him
not the actual photo

'AITAH for refusing to drive a longer route to drop a girl off because she didn't want to be alone in the car with me?'

I feel like its relevant to mention I'm a male. This situation involves me and 3 other people.

Lets call them Joe, Sandra, and Amy.

I'm good friends with Joe, we've been friends since we were kids. I know Sandra through Joe and the three of us hang out regularly.

Last week, Sandra invited her friend Amy to hang out with us. Amy and Sandra are good friends and shes met Joe before.

It was my first time meeting her. We just saw a movie and then went bowling.

When everything was done Sandra asked me if I was ok to drive Amy home. I said yeah no problem.

I'm the only one who drives so I usually drop everyone off after we see each other.

I live in the middle of nowhere, like an hour north of all of them. They all live pretty close together.

From where we were and where everyone's house is, it made sense to drop off Joe first, then Sandra, and then Amy.

Then continue on home. We didn't discuss the logistics in advance so I dropped Joe off first, then was heading to Sandras.

I could tell Amy and Sandra were texting each other and they were kind of whispering.

I had a feeling they were talking about me but I didn't know for sure until Sandra just pointed out I made a wrong turn

and Amy's house was the other way. I explained it made more sense to drop Sandra off first, then Amy.

It was only at this point Amy mentioned she didn't want to be alone in the car with me.

Her only reason was because I'm a man and she alluded that being alone in a car with a man she doesn't really know is unsafe.

So what she was asking me was to drop her off next then drive 10 minutes back, in the opposite direction of my house, to drop Sandra off.

Then another 10 minutes, back the exact same way I just came from, passing Amy's house again, in order to get home.

My drive home is already an hour from town so I said no. I didn't want to add an extra 20 minutes to my already 60 minute drive.

They were both really pressuring me and trying to guilt me into just doing it but I kept saying no.

It was such an awkward car ride because they just didn't give up.

Amy just got out of the car at Sandras house. She kind of slammed the door all aggressively which pissed me off a little.

I just drove straight home afterwards.

Joe called me the next day and heard what happened. He felt like I should have just done it but I feel like their ask was unreasonable.

I'm not going to go way out of my way to do a favour for someone who just thinks I'm some messed up abuser or something.

Anyways, just looking for opinions on whether or not I'm the a__hole here.

Amy’s request was rooted in a real social fear that many women experience about personal safety when they are alone with men they don’t know well. Research on women’s perceptions of safety shows that women consistently report feeling less safe than men in a variety of everyday situations even when actual risk is uncertain.

For example, surveys in the UK found that a much higher proportion of women feel unsafe walking alone after dark in public places compared with men, illustrating how safety concerns shape women’s behaviour and caution in social contexts.

This broader fear of victimisation is supported by psychological and sociological research showing that women often have heightened anxiety about crime and personal harm.

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Studies on “women’s fear of crime” explain that women tend to report higher levels of fear and perceived risk in scenarios where they are alone, especially after dark or in confined spaces, and this can influence their expectations in social interactions.

So from Amy’s perspective, even if she wasn’t able to fully articulate it, her discomfort wasn’t coming from thin air, it reflects a common and documented pattern of safety concern among women that influences how they make decisions about who they spend time with and under what conditions.

Women are more likely to take precautions because they know, statistically, that gender‑based harassment and violence affects them at higher rates, which can increase feelings of vulnerability in situations that others might see as innocuous.

That said, Amy’s demand to rearrange everyone’s route and add about 40 extra minutes to OP’s drive was a disproportionate request.

In social norms around transportation and courtesy, it’s reasonable to ask someone to make small adjustments like dropping a friend off first if that fits the route but it’s not generally considered a social obligation to take major detours that significantly increase someone’s travel time and inconvenience.

OP already had a long drive home and was not asked in advance to go out of his way; he was simply trying to follow an efficient sequence of drop‑offs. OP’s refusal to add a substantial detour was, from a logistical standpoint, a reasonable boundary to set.

Furthermore, communication style matters. Instead of calmly expressing her discomfort before getting in the car, Amy waited until OP was already driving and then pushed for a last‑minute change with pressure and guilt tactics.

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Research on conflict and communication shows that when people are pushed into defensive reactions, especially through pressure rather than discussion, it often escalates tension instead of resolving any genuine concern.

OP’s reaction, feeling frustrated and declining the detour, reflects a reasonable decision to maintain their personal boundary. Being willing to help (driving his friends home) is generous, but it doesn’t require significant personal cost based on a last‑minute assumption or fear, especially when the friends did not communicate their comfort needs ahead of time.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

These commenters agreed that the friend’s actions were immature and unfair

skldjhfksjhdfklj − She can take a Lyft from sandras

EmuIcy3228 − NTA- how Amy handled it was immature.

If she really felt that uncomfortable with being alone with you driving she should have (privately) gotten an uber from Sandra’s house

or asked Sandra to drive her. It was an unfair ask.   Also this is coming from a woman who definitely appreciates the safety concern.

fadingsunsetglow − Nta. Her getting out at Sandra's was the right thing for her to do if she was uncomfortable.

You were giving her a free ride. Totally her choice to not take it, for whatever reason, but you didnt do anything wrong.

This group recommended that the poster set clear boundaries

Jessicanne505 − NTA, I would have even suggested that she needs to get out at Sandra’s as you don’t feel comfortable being in the car alone with her.

JujutsuK00 − NTA. They can all uber home next time

Epaulette22 − NTA. Are her feelings valid? Absolutely! But if she had expectations of being dropped off "not last"

she should have said that up front or politely gotten out at one of her friend's places and taken an Uber.

You're not obliged to adhere to everyone's ride requests, especially one you didn't know about.

These users expressed concerns about the irrationality and paranoia behind the friend’s actions

No_Pool4833 − So they were ok with Sandra being in the car alone with you but not her?

Drop them both at Sandra's house and make youre own way home safe from any accusations

Kind-Philosopher1 − Too scared to sit in a car with you for 10 minutes when people know exactly where she is and who she is with...

but not too scared to ask for a favor and a ride?

For your own safety you should not be in the car alone with someone this paranoid and irrational.

Lord only knows what she could misinterpret and/or accuse you of.

MotherOvAbominations − As a woman - I agree with them, but as an outsider to the situation with no skin in the game - youre NTA.

They spent all evening with you, they knew your route, knew you were headed home, and hell, your buddy has known you for years....

you would think that would have played a small role into them knowing whether or not they could trust you not to dump them in a ditch somewhere.

This group suggested more practical approaches

Disastrous_Art_1975 − If they wanted you to do it that way, that should have been agreed upon before. Also. Where did you pick them up from?

Ambroisie_Cy − Woman here. I can understand her being uncomfortable to a certain extent,

but if she doesn't want to stay alone in a car with a man, then she can find other arrangements.

I mean, it's 2026, there are taxis, Lyft, Uber, buses. She has a family as well she can call. NTA

teresajs − NTA Refuse to drive Amy ever again.

0000Tor − She should have called an Uber if this was going to be a problem for her. NTA

BeautifulChaosEnergy − I would text Sandra and Joe and let them know that you will no longer be providing free shuttle services

And maybe it’s time to find friends closer to home

Street_Pumpkin_4257 − Ask em for gas money for lengthening the route of something they were getting for free.

What do you think? Was the Reddit user right to refuse the detour, or should they have done more to accommodate Amy’s feelings? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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