Living with someone who shirks all shared responsibilities can erode trust and breed resentment. One roommate, feeling the weight of unpaid chores and silent frustration, tries to navigate the delicate balance of fairness and confrontation, only to be met with indifference and passive resistance.
The tension escalates as monetary adjustments replace honest conversation, deepening the silent rift between them. Caught in this emotional tug-of-war, the question lingers—who truly bears the burden of fairness when respect and communication have already been compromised?

AITA My roommate refuses to do any chores so I raised rent without telling him.






As renowned relationship expert Dr. John Gottman explains, “Communication is the lifeblood of any relationship, and that includes roommate relationships. Unaddressed resentments build walls.”
The core issue here is a breakdown in explicit agreement and subsequent passive-aggressive conflict management. When the roommate stopped doing chores without explanation, it created an immediate imbalance. The OP’s decision to unilaterally raise the rent by $150, while seemingly an attempt to balance the scales financially (re-monetizing the labor deficit), bypasses the crucial need for direct negotiation regarding shared duties. The roommate’s emotional distress over the rent increase, hidden from the OP, suggests he valued the status quo (free labor from the OP) and resented the OP taking control of the compensation structure, even if he did not wish to perform the chores himself. This dynamic establishes an unhealthy power structure where one party provides labor and the other party benefits from that labor, whether through direct monetary compensation or simply by avoiding responsibility.
The OP’s actions were an understandable reaction to being taken advantage of, but they escalated the situation by introducing a financial penalty without mutual agreement. A more effective approach would have been to schedule a firm discussion, explicitly stating that the current division of labor is unacceptable and proposing two clear options: 1) Recommencing equal chore division immediately, or 2) Establishing a new financial agreement *together* that accurately reflects the value of the labor differential, possibly involving a third party if necessary. Future conflict should be managed through direct, non-punitive communication focused on solutions, not unilateral adjustments.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.





















The original poster (OP) is clearly feeling overburdened and unappreciated due to their roommate completely neglecting shared household responsibilities after a year of fair division. The conflict centers on the roommate’s refusal to contribute to chores, coupled with his resistance to the OP’s unilateral financial adjustment intended to compensate for this imbalance.
Is the OP justified in feeling resentment and imposing a rent increase to address the complete absence of shared labor, or should they have pursued direct negotiation or mediation instead of altering the financial agreement unilaterally? This situation forces a debate on whether financial compensation can truly replace or excuse a failure to adhere to shared living responsibilities.







