After years of hard work and sacrifice, a young graduate finally reaches the threshold of independence, ready to claim the space that was always promised—a place to call their own in the city they’ve grown up in. But what should be a moment of triumph is clouded by hesitation and unspoken loyalty, as a long-time tenant clings to the home that now stands between a dream and reality.
Caught between gratitude and rightful expectation, the graduate wrestles with a growing frustration as their parents stall, torn between honoring commitment to the tenant and honoring their child’s journey toward stability. In a city where affordable housing is a rare gem, this silent battle over a humble apartment reveals the complex ties of family, fairness, and the cost of chasing a future.

AITA for wanting my parents to ask their long-term tenant to move out so I can live there?







According to Dr. Harriet Lerner, an expert in boundaries and family systems, ‘Unclear boundaries lead to unclear resentments.’ In this situation, the parents failed to formalize the implied agreement regarding the apartment, creating a conflict where loyalty to a long-term non-family member clashes with the responsibilities owed to their own child.
The parents’ hesitation stems from a common dynamic where maintaining a positive, low-conflict relationship with a tenant (a form of external validation) supersedes addressing the difficult but necessary requirement of establishing independence for their child. The adult child’s needs—especially in a high-cost-of-living area like New York and with a remote job requiring dedicated space—represent a crucial developmental milestone that is being unnecessarily obstructed by parental avoidance.
The parents should immediately communicate a firm timeline to the tenant, acknowledging the long tenancy but upholding their responsibility to their child. The appropriate action is to serve the necessary legal notice to vacate, allowing the tenant ample time to secure new housing while respecting the child’s right to the property they were implicitly promised.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.


“*Why should I have to be forced to look for more expensive housing when I grew up here.”*
Because YOU DON’t OWN IT, so you have ZERO input who lives there. Whether you grew up there or not is irrelevant.



Nothing more needed. You are an adult with an income. Go and get your own apartment and stop mooching off your parents.

It isn’t yours. Your parents can do whatever they want with it. Keeping a good tenant who has seemingly paid consistently and not caused any problems is in their best interest. You’re an adult. Your parents have zero obligation to coddle you.


Situations change. Hinted is not promised nor agreed. You’re an adult who, according to your own words, can afford to live on your own. You just don’t *want* to pay higher rent. Which, hey, fair!


The recent graduate feels their reasonable desire for independent housing, especially given their financial stability and the high cost of living, is being unfairly sidelined. The central conflict lies between the parents’ established loyalty and commitment to a long-term, reliable tenant and their obligation to support their adult child’s necessary transition to independent living.
Given that the apartment was implicitly promised for the child’s eventual use, should the parents prioritize their established business relationship with the tenant over their immediate family obligation to provide housing for their newly independent child?







