One Roommate’s Family Shows Up And Stays The Night In A Shared House Of 4

A new homeowner set clear house rules with her three roommates about giving notice before any guests arrived and never leaving visitors unsupervised. Everything seemed straightforward until one roommate’s distant family began showing up unannounced. The first time they crashed in the living room for nearly two days while the roommate worked elsewhere, including a toddler and an unvaccinated grandfather left completely alone in the unfamiliar home.

Weeks later the same pattern repeated right before New Year’s Eve when the family drove up unexpectedly again, once more filling the shared spaces without proper warning and forcing the owner into another uncomfortable confrontation over broken boundaries.

Homeowner calls out roommate for unannounced family stays breaching house rules.

One Roommate's Family Shows Up And Stays The Night In A Shared House Of 4
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for telling my roommate to get her family out of my house?'

Last year I bought my first house, it has 4 bedrooms with me B, C, and D.

We have 2 guest rules: send a heads up if you are having guests and don't leave guests home alone.

It's usually "FYI friends coming for dinner" or "FYI bf staying the night".

D's family lives about 5 hours away. Her siblings range from 2m to 20y old.

She also has a large extended family and told us they were coming for the weekend to visit.

She never mentioned a hotel and I asked "hey just curious where is your family staying?

I just can't have a whole family here" She said "of course not they have a hotel but can my sister stay some nights, she misses me"

I said "of course your sister can stay I just meant the house can't support a whole fam". They cancelled on her last minute

The next weekend she had to work all day both days. Her family decided to come up that weekend and drove up Fri night.

She texted us Fri around 11:49pm saying "fam came in late, it was spontaneous can they crash in the living room and check into the hotel in the morning"

I was at my bfs house, B and D were also away that weekend. No one saw the text or replied till morning, I thought it was fine when I...

Sunday morning I get a text from B "why is there a toddler in the living room? and who is the old guy?"

She came home to several people in our house. I immediately called D and said why is your fam in the house without you?

She said they ended up staying and she didn't tell us cuz "her weekend was crazy and she was busy"

I said that her family has never been to our house before, don't have a key, she wasn't with them, and she didn't tell anyone.

She told me her mother, step-father, grandfather, a toddler (idk who), teen sister,

and the 2 mo were thre completely alone for nearly 2 days. and her grandfather isn't vaccinated

I don't think her family was going to break or steal anything and this wasn't financial

because she told me they shopped a bunch and had already had a hotel booked.

Afterwards I told her I was sorry for being abrupt but it caught me off guard and please don't do it again. She agreed and we moved on

NYE she does it again. Told us her family would come up to visit Sat morning and they had an airbnb.

She texts us NYE 10pm "my fam decided to drive up today due to weather, we don’t check in until tomorrow."

I called her immediately and said that she needs to find her family a place for the night and the house is not an option. She told me they were...

I find out the next day that B came home and again was surprised to find all the people in the house with no warning.

D texted the group chat of their arrival moments after B saw them all.

I told her the time to tell us and the time to find a hotel was 4.5 hours ago when they started driving.

She has avoided me since. AITA?

The core issue here boils down to broken communication and repeated boundary-pushing in a shared home. The homeowner had clear, reasonable expectations: a simple text for heads-up on guests and no leaving them unsupervised.

Yet the roommate’s family visits turned spontaneous in ways that caught everyone off guard, with people letting themselves in (or being let in) without the full group knowing.

From one angle, the roommate might have felt torn between family loyalty and roommate obligations. Large families with young kids and elders often create last-minute logistics chaos, especially with travel and weather involved. Spontaneous plans happen, and she may have assumed a quick text would suffice or that her family would keep things low-key.

On the flip side, the homeowner’s reaction makes total sense: as the property owner, they’re ultimately on the hook for anything that goes wrong under their roof. Walking into your own living room to find strangers  unsupervised is a safety and liability red flag.

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Broadening this out, roommate conflicts over guests rank among common shared-living headaches. One survey highlighted that differing expectations around visitors contribute to tension, with many people citing poor communication as a top issue alongside cleaning disputes. In shared households, unclear guest policies can quickly erode trust and turn a home into a source of stress rather than comfort.

A key concern raised in community discussions involves potential risks when guests stay over. Standard homeowners policies often don’t fully cover scenarios involving extended or unapproved visitors, particularly if an accident occurs.

For instance, if someone slips or gets hurt, the property owner could face liability claims, and many policies limit or exclude coverage for business-like or guest-heavy use.

Experts in insurance note that “if a guest is injured on your property, you may be held liable for medical expenses or other damages,” underscoring why clear rules and advance notice matter for everyone’s protection.

Psychologists emphasize that healthy boundaries in shared living (or family dynamics) prevent resentment from building. As psychologist Ilene Strauss Cohen Ph.D. puts it in discussions around interpersonal limits: boundaries “are the limits we set with other people, which indicate what we find acceptable and unacceptable in their behavior towards us.”

In roommate situations, consistently enforcing agreed-upon rules helps maintain respect without turning minor issues into major blowups.

Neutral advice here? Revisit the house rules together in a calm group chat or meeting, document them clearly, and consider consequences like restricting guest privileges if violations continue.

If the pattern persists, exploring roommate changes might protect the home’s peace and the owner’s investment.

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These are the responses from Reddit users:

Some users believe the roommate’s family visits show disrespect and recommend evicting her.

Comfortable-Iron6482 − NTA It’s not like they are in ‘just dropping by’ distance.

There is a communication breakdown happening somewhere, either with Ds family to her, D to you or all of the above.

The minimum heads up would be 4 hours, during the day when people are (awake and) able to respond.

A full days notice is not unreasonable to insist on. Stand your ground OP.

I’d be horrified to realise a whole collection of people had let themselves into my home without my knowledge, good intentions or otherwise.

theDagman − NTA Time to evict D.

RainCityMomWriter − NTA. The family is doing this on purpose at this point.

MaryAnne0601 − NTA Evict D and here’s why, if the child or grandparent falls and gets hurt they sue you.

Anyone gets hurt or something happens they sue you. The other roommates aren’t happy with every time her family comes they come home to a house full of people.

I doubt seriously if D has renter’s insurance but even if she does as the owner of the house the liability is all on you.

Incidentally time to check your policy limits. They sue for more than the stated limits and win, you lose the house. No one does this.

One guest occasionally that doesn’t stay 3 days fine. Anything more than that is unacceptable. She also keeps doing it! Time for her to go.

Others suggest setting firm boundaries or confronting the family directly instead of immediate eviction.

itsjustmo_ − I has this same basic situation in my first apartment. I think you should try the thing that worked for me.

Stop telling your roommate her family can't come and instead go directly to the parents.

I think there is a good chance they either don't know you're her landlord or they don't respect that because you are young.

You need to essentially treat this as the lease violation it is and issue them a notice.

I sent my ex-roomie's mommy a letter that said something along the lines of,

"You visited my home and X and Y dates. You stayed for A and B hours/days.

This letter is to notify you that those visits violate the terms and conditions of your daughter's lease.

We do not permit overnight guests, nor do we allow guests use of the home when roommates are not present.

To reiterate the agreement already in place, Roommate's guests are to book a hotel during extended stays.

Please be advised that further violations of this rule will likely result in termination of her lease.

I advise you to consider this information and choose your behavior accordingly."

Someone in your roommate family doesn't believe they have to abide you. Might be your roommate or it could be her parents.

She might be telling them no and they come anyway, and if she's used to a controlling family then she probably won't realize she can even say no.

Sending a notice like this does 3 things:

1) it helps cover your ass in terms of them claiming it's okay to be there

2) it teaches her that if she ducks around like this she is gonna find out

3) it teaches her family that they aren't the boss of your castle.

Some people view the repeated visits as intentional boundary violations and advise evicting the roommate.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Sounds like it's time for a new roommate.

Beth77303 − NTA But I think it's time to ask them to move out. They clearly don't have respect for you or the house rules

and will only continue to do this to you and other members of the house.

ButLikeSeriously − NTA. I’m willing to bet that she is encouraging their “impromptu” visits, given they coincidentally line up with times you’re not there.

My guess is they’re not all crashing in the living room, either. Set a firm boundary and stick to it, or tell her she’s no longer welcome as a roommate.

[Reddit User] − NTA. First one was free, now she’s taking liberties.

[Reddit User] − NTA emergency happen but this was on purpose evict this person

Do you think the Redditor’s firm stance was fair given the repeated surprises and potential risks, or did they come on too strong? How would you handle surprise family invasions in a shared house, extra rules, a polite eviction notice to the roommate, or something else? Share your hot takes below!

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