A group of coworkers agreed to order lunch together, arranging for one person (OP) to pay upfront and collect the food, with others paying back via Venmo. The core conflict began when OP noticed that one coworker, Sarah, had ordered two full meals instead of the expected single meal.
When questioned, Sarah instructed OP to pay for both meals, stating she would eat the extra later. After paying to avoid delays, OP held Sarah accountable for the full amount, which resulted in Sarah becoming upset and accusing OP of being petty. Now, other coworkers are suggesting OP overreacted, leaving OP questioning whether they were wrong to insist Sarah pay for her entire order.

AITAH for refusing to pay for my coworker’s lunch after she “accidentally” ordered double?







According to Dr. Reese James, a specialist in interpersonal workplace dynamics, “Financial clarity, even in small transactions, establishes vital precedents for respect and boundary maintenance within a team structure.”
Sarah’s behavior suggests a lapse in accountability, attempting to leverage the convenience of the payment system and the OP’s desire for efficiency to shift her financial burden onto the collector. Her immediate reaction—laughing off the request and then claiming the OP was ‘covering it’—is a common tactic to test boundaries and gauge how much personal responsibility others are willing to absorb on her behalf.
The OP acted correctly in setting and maintaining a clear boundary. While paying the extra amount might have seemed simpler in the moment to avoid a queue, doing so would have implicitly endorsed Sarah’s expectation that the OP would subsidize her choices. By standing firm, the OP prioritized fairness and established that agreements regarding shared costs must be honored. The path forward for the OP involves maintaining this boundary but perhaps addressing the broader group dynamic separately, ensuring future lunch orders have stricter protocols to prevent such ambiguity.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.













The OP is in a difficult position, caught between honoring a clear group agreement regarding payment for shared expenses and facing social pressure from coworkers who believe the cost difference was insignificant enough to ignore. The conflict centers on the expectation of financial accountability versus maintaining workplace harmony.
Did the OP do the right thing by enforcing the agreed-upon financial responsibility, even if it caused minor workplace friction, or should they have absorbed the small cost to keep the peace? Readers are asked to judge if OP was right to stand firm on payment for both meals.







