She Let Her Sister Stay “Temporarily,” And A Year Later She Feels Like A Guest In Her Own Home

It usually starts with something simple. A breakup, a hard patch, a family member needing “just a few months” to get back on their feet.

That’s exactly how it started for one 45-year-old woman. She and her husband opened their home to her older sister, expecting it to be temporary support during a rough time.

A year later, nothing about it feels temporary anymore.

Instead, it feels like her home has slowly stopped belonging to her at all. What used to be kindness is now starting to feel like quiet resentment building in the background.

And now she’s wondering if she’s the bad guy for wanting her sister to finally move out.

She Let Her Sister Stay “Temporarily,” and a Year Later She Feels Like a Guest in Her Own Home
Not the actual photo

Here’s the original post:'AITAH for wanting my sister to move out after her “temporary” stay has turned into a year with zero end in sight?'

This is my first post so sorry if it's a little long. I (45F) let my older sister (49F),

we'll call her Peggy, move in with me and my husband about a year ago after a breakup.

The plan was that it would be temporary—just a few months so she could get back on her feet.. Well… it’s been a year.

At first, I didn’t mind. I wanted to help her, and I knew she was going through a tough time.. But over time, there have been growing issues with boundaries.

When she moved in, we told her she could use our spare room and the bathroom next to it,

with the understanding that the bathroom would still be shared since it's downstairs along with my craft room and

my husband’s office among other rooms. Within a day of moving in, she had unpacked, removed all of our decor,

redecorated, and basically claimed both spaces. Now she refers to them as “her room” and “her bathroom”

and gets annoyed if anyone else uses the bathroom downstairs. (Ya, the one we had agreed was not hers in the first place but that she could use it).

Peggy also tends to insert herself into our time. If my husband and I say we’re having a quiet date night or just want time together,

she’ll still come in and join us like it’s a group hangout. Between her and our teen,

it honestly feels like we don’t have any privacy in our own home anymore.

Recently, we finished our basement, including a family room. Ever since then, she’s made comments about having the “whole downstairs” to herself.

Last night, my husband and I were down there watching a show,

and she came out and seemed annoyed that we were using the space, making a few snide comments like we were in her area..

That’s when it really hit me that she may not see this as temporary at all.

To be fair, she’s still trying to get back on her feet, and I know things haven’t been easy for her. That’s part of why I’ve hesitated to push harder.

Also, for context, she isn’t currently paying rent or contributing financially,

which is part of why the space/boundary issue has been weighing on me more.

In the full year she has been here she has paid about $1200 if that.

We provide all food, utilities, clothing, we even pay her phone bill.

We're happy to do it so she can save to get her own place but we recently found out, she isn't saving anything.

I want to give her time, but this was never meant to be long-term, and I’m starting to feel like this is not my home.

I’ve tried bringing up future plans, but she either shuts it down or says she’s “working on it.”.

I love her, but I’m starting to feel frustrated and honestly a little resentful.. AITAH for wanting to give her a move-out deadline?

When “stay for a while” becomes permanent energy

At first, everything made sense.

Her sister had just gone through a breakup. She needed stability, somewhere safe to land, time to regroup. The arrangement was clear, a few months, maybe longer if things were slow.

But after a year, the situation hasn’t moved forward at all.

The sister is still there. Still in the spare room. Still using the space like it belongs to her.

And slowly, the lines that were supposed to stay clear started disappearing.

She didn’t just unpack. She rearranged. Took over the bathroom. Removed decor. Started referring to areas of the house as “hers.”

It didn’t happen with permission. It just… happened.

And no one stopped it early enough to reset it.

The small things that start feeling not so small

At first, it was easy to overlook.

Extra presence in shared spaces. Joining in on quiet time. Being around during moments that were supposed to be private.

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But over time, it stopped feeling like “helping family” and started feeling like having no space to breathe in her own home.

Even simple things like watching a show with her husband turned into group situations without consent.

Then there’s the money part.

The agreement was support while she got back on her feet. Food, utilities, phone bill, even clothes covered.

But the expectation behind it was always the same, that she would be saving and preparing to leave.

Instead, she isn’t saving anything.

And that’s where the emotional shift happens.

Because generosity feels very different when it no longer leads anywhere.

Why situations like this quietly break boundaries

Family therapists often point out that extended “temporary” living situations can create what they call role confusion, where a guest slowly becomes a permanent resident without formal agreement.

According to American Psychological Association, unclear boundaries in close relationships, especially when financial dependence is involved, can lead to resentment, communication breakdown, and loss of autonomy within shared spaces.

In practical terms, it means the person hosting starts adapting to the guest, instead of the guest adapting to the household.

That’s exactly what seems to have happened here.

The sister didn’t just stay longer than expected. She gradually started shaping the home around herself.

And the longer that goes on, the harder it becomes to reset without conflict.

The emotional tipping point

What really changes everything isn’t just the money or the space.

It’s the realization that the situation might not be temporary in the other person’s mind anymore.

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When she starts reacting to shared spaces like they belong to her, that’s when it hits the homeowner differently.

Because it reframes everything.

This isn’t “helping family through a rough patch” anymore.

It’s sharing a home with someone who may not be planning to leave at all.

And that’s where guilt starts to clash with exhaustion.

Love is still there. But so is frustration. And resentment creeping in around the edges.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Most people said she was not the problem and that a clear move-out deadline is overdue.

One-Passion5107 − NTA Wow I’m surprised your husband has put up with this for so long.

For the sake of both of your sanity I suggest you tell your sister it’s time to go.

Pedal2Medal2 − Sister, you know what you need to do. It’ll be messy, she’ll go into full beast mode, but, has to be done.

Also, start tallying up everything you’ve paid or not been paid for & present a bill if she refuses to go

Maximum-Spot-9523 − Take back the downstairs bathroom. Get rid of her stuff. Do your business in that bathroom.

Then take back the room downstairs she calls hers. Give her a firm deadline when she must leave. Invite guests over.

Let her sleep on the couch. She's too comfortable there. Charge her, going forward immediately, $1000 a month.

Stop paying her bills. She's not saving. She's taking advantage

Many pointed out that a year of no savings and increasing control of space is a sign the arrangement has already gone too far.snafuminder − Give her that deadline IN WRITING. ETA -NTA.

jonnythunder65 − Nta. If she isn't paying rent or helping with anything else then wtf is she doing. Does she work ?

Sorry she has been there a year and has no money to be able to get a place of her own.

And makes you feel uncomfortable in YOUR home. And is trying to take over YOUR home She is using you.

Tell her she has 6 months to save up enough money to get out. And start setting some boundaries

Apart-Ad-6518 − That's when it really hit me me that she may not see this as temporary at all.

Looks like she doesn't. You've been kind & so's your husband. Give her a deadline & stick to it. NTA

Others focused on boundaries, saying the issue isn’t just the sister overstaying, but the lack of early enforcement of limits like space, privacy, and financial contribution.redlips_rosycheeks − NTA for wanting any guest who overstays their welcome to leave,

especially not one that has notably abused your generosity, walked all over your set boundaries, and abused your financial support.

You are the AH for letting it go so long without speaking to the issues,

and you are the AH for not communicating clearly and pushing back when she first started “redecorating.

” You DEFINITELY should have called her out the second she made any comments around “her spaces. ”

Unfortunately, if it gets as hostile as it can with unwanted guests, you legally can’t force her to leave without specific notice,

since due to the length of time and the laws in your country around tenancy, she’s effectively now a resident of your home.

Many places have laws that require so much advance notice for a tenant to leave a property,

and you might have to start a formal evictions process if she really digs her heels in.

But at the end of the day, your only flaw is in not communicating clearly, promptly, and consistently regarding her timeline and your boundaries.

It’s clear she’s grown comfortable pushing past your no’s or ignoring your subtle hints,

so you need to sit her down for a real conversation, and don’t let her run or hide away until she says an exact date she’ll be out by.

Then you text her after the conversation, “Hey, just checking in after our chat and agreement that you’ll be moving into your own place by x date.

I’m sorry if you’re feeling hurt or uncomfortable. I can tell you’re ready to have your own space, and we’re ready to have our privacy back as a married couple.

“ Then it’s documented, she agreed to it, and you can either check in periodically as the time passes if the conversation went well,

or leave her alone to figure it out if she’s very angry with you. Regardless, you make sure she’s out by that date.

And in the meantime, tell her she’s gotta put your bathroom back the way it was,

it’s a shared bathroom, and it’s a part of your home, and any guest who visits is welcome to use it, but not redecorate it.

Is_It_Soup_Season − NTA Look up the landlord tenant laws in your state. Give her 3 months to save, file a proper eviction by the necessary if she isn’t receptive.

Vegetable-Cod-2340 − NTA Op, if you give a mouse a cookie, it’s going to want a glass of milk.

You’ve already given her too much leeway, so be clear that she has X months to move out ,

and let her know you expect her to return the ‘her rooms’ to their previous designs.

Don’t fall for any of her guilt trips or manipulations, she’s already taken advantage of you, so feel free to give her a move out deadline.

Tintinabulation114 − Give her a deadline. She obviously needs to know that she has to be out by X date in order for her to wake up and

recognize that this isn’t working. But you and your husband have to be firm. Nice, but firm. Otherwise she will stay there indefinitely.

It’s about what happens when temporary help slowly becomes permanent expectation without anyone clearly saying it out loud.

She didn’t stop caring about her sister.

But she’s starting to feel like she disappeared inside her own home.

And now the real question isn’t whether she’s the asshole for wanting her sister to leave.

It’s whether “temporary” can still mean anything after it stops being temporary in practice.

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