The Original Post
My (f 22) friend (f 22) is turning 23 this year. She has not had a birthday party in a few years because her birthday falls on the week of Thanksgiving and when she tried to have one for her 18th birthday party only 5 people showed up and that’s not including her immediate family when she invited multiple friends, provided catering, and the food with money from her own pocket. She has since dropped certain friends for their behavior towards her. They were pretty valid reasons though not important to this. She has a new friend group that treat her great and show up to hang out, are there when things are tough, or there is an emergency in her life.
I have been her friend since we were both 13. For this year even though it’s not a significant birthday it’s a new beginning for her and she says it feels like a “rebirth” in a way and a weight has been lifted off her shoulder so she wants to go all out with this birthday. Catering from her favorite place, her favorite performer who offers to perform at events, decorations, etc. When she told me about this I was supportive and told her she should do it! Until she told me roughly how much this party would cost her.
The performers fee alone would be $605.5 and then the catering would be around $100-$200 if she invited 25-30 people like she planned. And then the decorations she said she would be using some that she had at home already or DIYing them with her family. She wants it to be little mermaid themed since she recently made a cosplay of her favorite character Melody from the sequels and she wanted to wear that for the party. She would be spending about $1000 for this entire event herself. I already know it because when she throws a party she throws a PARTY! Even though no one showed up to the last one she hosted for herself it was AMAZING.
Now…she wants to have people pay her $25 to rsvp so that she could use that money to pay the live performer and take off the most major weight of what she’d be paying for the event. She asked me what I thought and I told her “that’s the stupidest shit I’ve ever heard.” She knows how blunt I am and has told me before “if I’m being stupid call me out on it.” So that’s what I did.
No one that I know in our friend group is going to pay $25 to go to a birthday party they were invited to. If I’m invited to a birthday party then I should be going for free and using my money to buy her a gift. Not using that money to pay for entertainment that is supposed to be for everyone to enjoy.
She called me a bitch and told me to leave before she said something else she’d regret later on. Since I’m so close to her family her mother texted me saying that “whatever I said to her was really hurtful” and that she’s been upset since I left and that I should apologize. She asked me a question and I simply answered with my opinion. AITA?
What Reddit Said
Reddit quickly rallied against the friend who refused to pay. Most users pointed out that $25 for a catered event with live entertainment is actually reasonable. However, they agreed the real issue wasn’t the money itself.
The consensus focused on how cruel and unsupportive the friend’s response was. Many Redditors suggested simple alternatives like “in lieu of gifts, please contribute $25.” Moreover, users emphasized that true friends support each other’s dreams, not crush them with harsh words.
The Verdict
The overwhelming consensus: YTA (You’re the Asshole). While having a friend charging money for a birthday party felt unusual, Reddit decided the real problem was the brutal delivery of criticism. This is a classic case of friendship drama where honesty crossed the line into cruelty, showing that social etiquette matters even between close friends.
Original post from r/AmItheAsshole (1,166 upvotes, 774 comments)