AITA for Saying No When My Wheelchair-Bound Tenant Asked Me to Install a Stairlift?

Living with a tenant can be tricky, but when boundaries get blurred, things can spiral fast. I never imagined I’d be called selfish for wanting to keep part of my own home private. I (21F) inherited this house from my late great-aunt, who made the downstairs fully wheelchair accessible. When I rented out the downstairs to a tenant (26M) in a wheelchair, I thought we had the perfect arrangement — he had everything he needed on one floor, and I had my upstairs space for myself. But now, after months of living together, he’s been pressuring me to install a stairlift so he can access my upstairs, and my refusal has sparked a huge debate about whether I’m being unfair… or just setting healthy boundaries.

A House That Has Been My Sanctuary For Years

Enter Brian — My Wheelchair-Bound Tenant

The Request That Started the Tension

Family Drama Joins the Chat

So… Am I the Villain Here?

Let’s find out what other Redditors think about this story.

I don’t see myself as a bad person for saying no, especially when the upstairs isn’t part of what he’s renting and the downstairs is already fully equipped for him. But my brother thinks I’m being unreasonable and even a little heartless. To me, it’s not about his disability — it’s about my privacy, my safety, and my right to keep my personal space mine. Still, I can’t shake the feeling that maybe people will see me as a villain in this. So, Reddit… am I the a**hole here, or am I just protecting what’s mine?

What do you think?

Written by Abeera Anwar

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