She Bought A Thoughtful Birthday Gift, Then Her Friend Took Credit For It

Gift-giving is supposed to feel good. It’s one of those small, meaningful ways we show people they matter. For one 29-year-old woman, that intention was crystal clear. She had spent time, effort, and what little money she had to put together something special for a close friend’s birthday.

But what should have been a simple, heartfelt moment turned unexpectedly awkward. Not because the gift wasn’t appreciated, it absolutely was, but because someone else quietly stepped in and took credit for it.

What followed wasn’t a dramatic confrontation or a public callout, just a quiet correction the next day. Still, it left her wondering if she had crossed a line.

She Bought a Thoughtful Birthday Gift, Then Her Friend Took Credit for It
Not the actual photo

Here’s the original post:

'AITA for telling my friend her birthday gift was only from me?'

I (F29) wanted to make a special gift for my friend (F34). Let’s call bday girl Sarah, she and I got close this year

and I think she deserved something really nice to represent how much she means to me and how much she shows up for people.

The day before I stayed at our other friend’s (let’s call her Emma) place. We were shopping the day before so Emma knew I was buying the gift for Sarah...

or getting something herself, which is fine because they’re not as close. So Sunday comes and we are all meeting up.

Unfortunately I didn’t have time to wrap the gifts so gave her the card and about 50 dollars worth of Sephora products loose in a bag.

I told her I’m sorry about the delivery (I couldn’t find a gift bag to buy) but it’s for her birthday and she can open it later but I’m really...

Sarah starts looking and is so excited by an eyeliner I got her when Emma starts telling her yess I got the same in another colour and I was telling...

Sarah then thanks us both and Emma says you’re welcome and gives her a hug. It was odd to me because I would have been honest if I were Emma...

For context I’m unemployed and money is tight so this gift meant a lot to me to give her.

The next day I decided to text Sarah and tell her it was actually just from me.. she thanked me again and I felt bad because I wasn’t looking for...

because it felt unfair that Emma could just blatantly lie and give nothing to the gift when she has more money than me and chose to just buy herself things...

There are many other situations with Emma that make me question my response and I’m curious, AITA for telling Sarah the truth when I could have said nothing?

When a Kind Gesture Gets Complicated

She had grown closer to “Sarah” over the past year and wanted to reflect that with a meaningful gift.

Even though money was tight, she picked out around 50 dollars’ worth of Sephora products. It wasn’t just about the items themselves, it was about showing appreciation in a thoughtful way.

The day before the birthday, she had been shopping with another friend, “Emma,” who clearly saw the purchases being made.

Emma didn’t offer to contribute, didn’t suggest splitting the cost, and didn’t show much interest in the gift at all. That was fine. Not every friendship carries the same weight.

Fast forward to the birthday gathering. The gift wasn’t wrapped, just placed in a bag with a card, but the intention was still there.

When Sarah started going through it, she lit up. One eyeliner in particular caught her attention, and that’s when things took a turn.

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Emma jumped in. She started talking about how she had gotten the same product in a different color, chiming in as if she had been part of the gift all along.

Then came the moment that made everything feel off.

Sarah thanked both of them. And Emma said, “you’re welcome,” like it was completely natural.

The Quiet Decision to Speak Up

In the moment, she didn’t say anything. Maybe it was the surprise, maybe the social pressure, maybe just not wanting to create tension at a birthday celebration.

But the feeling lingered.

It wasn’t about needing extra praise or recognition. It was about fairness. She had stretched her budget to do something kind, while Emma had not contributed at all and still accepted credit.

So the next day, she sent Sarah a message. Calm, simple, and honest. She clarified that the gift had been from her alone.

Sarah responded with gratitude again, and that should have been the end of it.

Except now she felt guilty. Not because she lied, but because she told the truth.

Why This Situation Feels Bigger Than It Looks

On paper, this might seem like a small social hiccup. But emotionally, it taps into something deeper.

When resources are limited, giving becomes more meaningful. That gift represented effort, intention, and sacrifice.

Having someone else casually attach themselves to it can feel dismissive, even if they didn’t mean it that way.

Emma’s behavior also raises questions. Taking credit for something you didn’t contribute to is, at best, socially tone-deaf.

At worst, it’s intentional. The fact that she witnessed the purchase beforehand makes it harder to view as an innocent misunderstanding.

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Then there’s the hesitation to speak up. That’s incredibly common. Many people would rather sit with discomfort than risk being seen as confrontational.

In that sense, texting the next day might have actually been the most balanced option. It avoided public embarrassment while still setting the record straight.

There’s also a subtle pattern hinted at. The poster mentions “many other situations” with Emma that make her question herself.

That suggests this wasn’t a one-off moment, but part of a broader dynamic where boundaries may already be blurry.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

Most people sided with her. The general consensus was simple, if you didn’t contribute to a gift, you don’t get credit for it.

TweakedMango − It's kind of weird to do it the next day. I probably would have done it on the spot, even though it would have been awkward.

But no, taking credit for a gift you had put no thought into is weirder. NTA

flow2ebb2flow − NTA. And you really need to work on your confidence. Like, why would you feel bad about this?

Someone was trying to take credit for something you did that was important to you. Why the heck would you let that happen? Stop being a doormat.

Tripping_on_sunshine − I would have said something there and then as it’s just weird to take credit for a present you had nothing to do with.

You probably made it less awkward saying it by text instead of calling her out in front her so NTA.

Several commenters pointed out that Emma’s behavior was far stranger than the follow-up text.

DJ_NY_Supreme − NTA. Emma shouldn’t be taking credit for a gift she didn’t pay for or pitch in for.

What she did is trashy. Hell, showing up without a gift is trashy if you’re going to try to take credit for a gift

Strong_District_5894 − NTA If you don’t contribute to the gift you don’t get credit for giving it.

DarkBiscuity − honestly Emma is super weird for taking credit for a gift she didn't spend a cent on when she literally watched you buy it

Some suggested it might have been better to correct it in the moment, but others argued that doing it privately was actually more considerate.

GoreGoddezz − NTA. You did buy the gift by your self. Next time, if you're ever worried this could happen again, maybe include a card with just your signature so...

JaxLovesBirdies − Did someone just watch the ‘Big Salad’ episode of Seinfeld? Because this is basically the plot of that episode.

RoyallyOakie − NTA...Emma knew what she was doing.

turquoise_turtle83 − When Emma says ”You are welcome” in response to the ”Thank you”,

one response from you could have been ”oh, you wanted to be in on this gift from me? Then you can just send over half the amount, no problem”.

In the end, this wasn’t about attention or validation. It was about ownership of something meaningful.

She didn’t call anyone out publicly. She didn’t escalate the situation. She simply made sure the truth was clear.

And sometimes, that’s enough.

Still, it raises an interesting question. When someone crosses a quiet social boundary like this, is it better to keep the peace, or gently correct it before it becomes a pattern?

 

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