A new job, a bigger paycheck, and a major family shift, sounds like a recipe for celebration, right? Not so fast. One Reddit husband thought his promotion meant smooth sailing into a single-income household, but when he shared his “new rules” with his wife, things quickly spiraled into online chaos.
With two kids under three, the couple had relied on a nanny and housekeeping help to keep their lives afloat. But once the husband offered to support the family financially, he also announced that his wife would take on all cooking, cleaning, and childcare, no 50/50 split, no housekeeper, no nanny.
Want to hear how this family negotiation turned into a Reddit battleground? Let’s dive in.
One man’s new job and hefty pay raise let his wife quit her job to be a stay-at-home mom, but his refusal to do chores sparked a fiery clash













This is less about chores and more about expectations. OP and his wife are debating what life should look like if she becomes a stay-at-home mom. He works 60–80 hours a week and believes she should take on nearly all household tasks if she quits her job. She argues for a continued 50/50 split.
The disagreement reflects two very different ideas of fairness: his centered on paid work hours, hers on shared responsibility.
From OP’s perspective, the logic seems practical: if one partner works grueling hours outside the home, the other manages the home front. From his wife’s perspective, caring for a toddler and an infant is itself a full-time workload. In reality, she wouldn’t just be “at home”, she’d be doing the combined jobs of nanny, cook, and housekeeper. Neither side is wrong to want relief; both are underestimating the intensity of the other’s role.
This conflict points to a larger trend. A Pew Research Center survey found that 56% of married women say household chores are still divided unequally, even in dual-income families. When one partner stays home, the imbalance often grows. Sociologists call this the “second shift” where domestic work continues disproportionately, even if both partners are exhausted.
Marriage therapist Dr. John Gottman, author of The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work, emphasizes: “What matters is not a rigidly equal split, but whether both partners feel the division of labor is fair and are willing to adapt when circumstances change.” In this case, fairness might not mean 50/50 but it certainly doesn’t mean 100/0 either.
Advice? OP and his wife should frame this as a team problem, not a negotiation of who “wins.” Trial periods can help: let her try staying home with the kids while gradually adjusting paid services like housekeeping.
If she becomes overwhelmed, revisit keeping at least some help. And OP should commit to small, consistent contributions (trash duty, weekend meals, or bedtime routines) so his wife doesn’t feel abandoned.
Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:
These users called it NAH, urging the couple to negotiate as a team.






































These stay-at-home moms voted NTA but cautioned the husband that childcare is a full-time job









This group labeled him YTA, arguing his “no chores” dictate dismisses his wife’s 24/7 childcare work















In the end, this husband thought he was simply laying out the “rules” for a single-income household. Instead, he sparked a heated debate about fairness, respect, and invisible labor. Is he right that working 80 hours excuses him from chores or is his wife right that parenting and homemaking are already more than a full-time job?
When it comes to running a family, is the goal equality, or is it balance? What would you do if you were in this couple’s shoes? Share your thoughts below.