A night meant for joy and music turned into a harrowing test of trust and fear. Entrusting their gentle 7-year-old to a new babysitter, the couple left with hopeful hearts, expecting a simple evening filled with laughter and calm. But as the minutes stretched into uncertainty, the warmth of their family night began to unravel into a chilling silence that no parent should endure.
The clock’s ticking became a cruel reminder of their daughter’s vulnerability and the fragile line between safety and danger. What was supposed to be a brief, carefree outing morphed into an agonizing wait, where every shadow seemed to hold a question and every second weighed heavy with dread. This story is a raw glimpse into the fragile trust parents place in others and the profound emotional turmoil when that trust is shaken.

AITA for not paying the babysitter?









According to experts in contractual agreements and employment ethics, a service agreement defines the scope and duration of work. Dr. Richard H. Fallon, a specialist in labor relations, often stresses that while reasonable requests for overtime should be accommodated, compensation must align with the actual labor provided or the agreed-upon terms. In this case, the agreement was for 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM. The parents offered compensation for the ten extra minutes of waiting time, which is typically considered a good-faith gesture, even though the delay was not their fault.
The babysitter’s primary breach of conduct was abandoning the post at the agreed-upon end time (10:00 PM), leaving the child unattended until the parents returned. This action overrides any claim to further compensation. Furthermore, the security footage revealing property damage (broken ornament) and the theft of a family-sized bag of chips introduces clear grounds for withholding payment, as these actions constitute damages and potential theft, offsetting any minor amount owed. The sitter’s emotional outburst and subsequent blocking further demonstrate a severe lack of professionalism and poor conflict resolution skills.
The parents’ actions in refusing the final payment were understandable given the abandonment and property issues, though offering the base pay for the agreed hours (8:00 PM to 10:00 PM) would have been the cleaner professional resolution before the discovery of the damage. Moving forward, when hiring younger sitters, establishing clear expectations regarding emergencies, overtime compensation protocols (e.g., a 30-minute grace period before an extra hour charge), and explicitly outlining rules regarding food consumption and property handling in writing can prevent such ambiguous and costly disputes.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

![[deleted] NTA. 10000%. When I used to babysit as a...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/f240cd17ac381c7670ef25de504b5468.png)



Definitely
Asking a 15 year old kid to talk to you about something face to face is pretty threatening! You for your attitude towards a 15 year old kid.

You “I’m not paying you, it’s ONLY 10 minutes. I’ll talk to you face to face about that”
Her for leaving your kid.

Yours is a hard TA by trying to rip off a 15 year old kid. Picking a fight with her.



The more I read your comments. The closer I’m getting to Y T A
Edited – added last comments










She shouldn’t have left your kid alone but you shouldn’t have tried to nickel and dime a 15 year old over $15 and now gotten her parents (and strangers) involved just so you an validate yourself
you’re not wrong but you’re still TA and so is your babysitter (but then again she’s only 15)


![[deleted] ESH](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/92fb0abcd89fdd1de56d69778b615b45.png)
1) You were late. She was contracted until 10 pm at the agreed upon rate. She told you that she is charging $14.50 to stay late. You refused.








The parent found themselves in a difficult situation, feeling both justified in their refusal to pay the full extra amount due to the babysitter’s departure and guilty for the ensuing conflict. The central conflict involved the babysitter demanding an extra hour’s pay for a ten-minute delay caused by unforeseen traffic, while the parents felt this demand was unreasonable, especially given the babysitter abandoned their child at the agreed end time.
Given the babysitter’s insistence on extra pay, her unexplained early departure while the child was still in the home, and her failure to disclose property damage, were the parents correct in withholding payment entirely? Or does the initial agreement for service up to 10:00 PM obligate them to pay the base rate, regardless of the sitter’s subsequent unprofessional conduct?







