When Tyler asked me to move in after two years of dating, I thought it meant we were building a life together. I gave up my cramped apartment, decorated his place with love, cooked, cleaned, and fully settled in. Six weeks later, I opened the fridge and found an envelope taped to the orange juice. Inside? An invoice. Rent: $1,100 Utilities: $135 “Comfort contribution”: $75 Even a $40 “wear and tear” fee. Total: $1,350 — due in five days. I laughed,
thinking it was a joke. It wasn’t.Tyler stood there, calmly sipping a protein shake, and said, “This is what adults do. You need to contribute.” But you own the place,” I pointed out. “And I’ve been contributing — just not on paper.” He didn’t care. He didn’t want a partner; he wanted a tenant. So I played along — until I brought in a “roommate” to split costs: Jordan,
he flipped. “You can’t move someone in without asking!” “Why not?” I said sweetly. “I’m paying rent now — tenants can have roommates, right?” He tried to argue. I quietly packed my things, left $675 on the table (half the “rent”), and walked out with Jordan. We found a new place as roommates. Tyler?
He became a punchline among our mutual friends — the guy who tried to charge his girlfriend rent and ended up with a roommate instead. He texted later with apologies and “financial philosophies.” I never responded. Love isn’t a lease agreement — and if someone tries to charge you rent for being part of their life? Don’t argue. Just sublet and leave.