My Boyfriend Demanded I Pay Him Rent to Live in His Apartment

My Boyfriend Demanded I Pay Him Rent to Live in His Apartment

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.

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *