The user, a 27-year-old female (OP), works at a marketing agency with a coworker named Jess (31F) who is getting married next month. Jess initially invited the entire eight-person team to the wedding, and the team is generally friendly, engaging in typical work social activities.
When the office manager, Sarah, began collecting money for a group gift of $200 per person, the OP was prepared to contribute. However, Jess later informed the OP via text that she had to cut her from the guest list due to venue capacity, yet the OP knows all other team members remain invited. The OP suspects this change is because Jess invited an influential former coworker, leading the OP to question whether they should still contribute the full amount to the group gift when they are uninvited.

AITAH for refusing to chip in for a coworker’s wedding gift after literally being uninvited?










As organizational psychologist Dr. Michael D. Watkins explains, “In professional relationships, clarity around status and expectations is key to managing transitions and maintaining trust.” This situation perfectly illustrates a breakdown in perceived reciprocity within a workplace social structure.
The coworker, Jess, appears to be engaging in boundary-testing behavior, maintaining the professional/social relationship just enough to solicit a financial benefit ($200 gift) while actively degrading the personal relationship by rescinding the wedding invitation. The OP’s knowledge that the exclusion was likely strategic—making room for a person with higher perceived status (the VP contact)—highlights a transactional dynamic superseding genuine friendship. When the office manager, Sarah, enforces the group contribution by invoking ‘group harmony,’ she is applying social pressure to uphold an outdated or assumed social contract, ignoring the factual change in status (non-attendance). The OP’s refusal to pay the full amount is a natural assertion of boundaries in response to being devalued by the primary party (Jess).
The OP’s actions in refusing the full contribution were appropriate given the circumstances; a non-guest is not obligated to fund a major wedding gift. To handle this constructively next time, the OP should communicate clearly and calmly to Sarah that since the invitation was withdrawn, their participation in the associated group financial commitment is also withdrawn, perhaps offering a small, symbolic amount ($20 or $50) if maintaining superficial neutrality is paramount, but firmly declining the $200 expectation.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.














The core conflict centers on the expectation of continued social and financial participation in a celebratory event (the group gift) despite being explicitly excluded from the event itself. The OP feels slighted by the perceived reason for the uninvitation—prioritizing a high-value professional contact—while still being held to the group’s financial standard, creating a dilemma between maintaining superficial workplace harmony and honoring their personal exclusion.
The central question is whether the OP is wrong for refusing to pay the full group contribution ($200) for a wedding they are not attending, especially when the invitation was rescinded under questionable circumstances. Should the OP contribute a token amount or nothing at all, or is the expectation of maintaining ‘group harmony’ regarding the gift payment a valid workplace obligation regardless of guest status?







