Give some people an inch they will take a mile! Tell your spineless hubby and in-laws THEY can do her salon work fir FREE. You do not let them bamboozke you anymore. No is a complete sentence
I Refuse to Be My SIL’s Free Hairstylist Anymore—I’m Not Her Beauty Subscription

Offering professional help to family can feel natural, especially during difficult periods. But when does a little help turn into a sense of entitlement? Our Bright Side reader, Kelly (29, F), learned this the hard way.
Here’s her story:
I’m a professional hairstylist, and this is my only source of income. My husband’s sister is a single mom. Right after her divorce, when she was going through a hard time, I offered to cut and color her hair for free. I thought this would help cheer her up, but I never expected her to keep turning up at my salon every month for free haircuts, highlights, and treatments.
I didn’t expect it to go so far.
At first, I didn’t charge her. At the time, she was struggling, and I believed it would be short-term. Two years passed. She continued booking regular appointments, and I continued to say nothing because I didn’t know how to put a stop to this.
It was hurting me financially.
My business hasn’t been great over the past few months. I had several staff leave, and my expenses increased while my income stayed unpredictable. Salon supplies cost more, bills were piling up, and I had started cutting back everywhere I could.
Continuing to give away hours of work no longer felt generous; it felt reckless. When I suggested she pay me, she called me selfish and blocked me.
An unexpected encounter.
That was already weighing on me when I ran into my sister-in-law at another salon getting a manicure. She paid easily, joked with the technician, and didn’t hesitate for a second. I confronted her and asked her why she could pay other professionals but got mad when I asked for the same respect.
She laughed and said, “You’re family. I shouldn’t have to pay you. That would be awkward.” That was when I realized she wasn’t struggling financially anymore. She just felt entitled to free service, no matter what it cost me.
I knew I had to do something about it.
I told her that I couldn’t continue providing free services. I didn’t raise my voice or demand anything back. I simply said future appointments would need to be paid. She immediately went to my husband and told him I had attacked her and made her feel ashamed when she was already struggling.
He called me selfish and said I was choosing money over family. I showed him my records: $5,200 worth of unpaid work over two years. But he kept insisting that family is family.
She didn’t stop there.

Call lawyer first and then Buy Megaphone and shame them at public ! Instantly ruin her life work forever !
Nothing that a good divorce lawyer couldn't fix
Why are you wasting your time depending on your monthly salary when you can work staying at home just with your PC and mobile phone you can earn up to $4000 within 3 days
Www.Werich1
Tell ya husband and his family they can pay up or shut up she's a user
avoid people like that and sounds like your husband is a weak and u deserve better
Sounds like she is weak, her husband has zero to do with it
He called her selfish and doesn't give a cr$p about her she is running a business that is starting to struggle instead of growing a pair and telling HIS sister she needs to pay he insults his wife he is a gutless coward
Not at all!! And don't do anything free for any "family." Just refuse to say anything. If they keep it up hang up/tell them to leave/leave. Ask why if "family helps family" why she isn't paying to help you? $52, 00 is a lot of money. For someone who isn't family.
Stick to your guns and ignore your inlaws. However, if they keep at it, suggest that they reimburse you on behalf of their own daughter.
As for hubby, tell him that until his sister's debt is paid, you'll have to work extra hours so he'll need to fix his own dinner, do more household chores, etc.
And, of course, let her block you. That's certainly no loss to you!
That wasn’t the end of it. She took it to my parents-in-law next. Suddenly, I was being told that family doesn’t keep track of favors, that I should have more compassion, and that I had embarrassed her by bringing money into it.
No one asked how long this had been going on. No one asked how it affected my ability to pay my own bills. I’m being shamed for asking for my work to be respected. So I have to ask you, Bright Side readers, am I really in the wrong for asking my SIL to pay for her future salon appointments?
Kelly
Thank you for reaching out to us. Money can be a tricky subject in families, so here’s some advice to help you talk to your loved ones:
- Be clear that this was about unpaid work, not a personal attack: The conflict began when professional services were expected for free over a long period of time. When explaining yourself to family members, focus on the fact that this involved real labor, real costs, and real income loss. Framing it this way helps shift the conversation away from hurt feelings and back to the actual issue.
- Use concrete examples instead of general explanations: Vague statements about “helping out” can make it easier for others to dismiss your perspective. Sharing specifics, such as how often the services were provided and what they would normally cost, makes it harder for the situation to be minimized. This also helps family members understand why continuing the arrangement was no longer sustainable.
- Don’t let guilt replace accountability: Family members may frame your boundary as cruelty, selfishness, or a lack of compassion. That doesn’t erase the reality that your work has value and your limits matter. Feeling guilty does not mean you were wrong.
- Understand that fairness can feel threatening to people who benefited from imbalance: When a long-standing arrangement ends, those who gained from it may react defensively. Their discomfort doesn’t mean the boundary is unreasonable; it often means it’s overdue. Holding firm may feel uncomfortable, but consistency helps reset expectations over time.
Families taking advantage of other family members is a tale as old as time. Here’s another story about a plastic surgeon whose aunt demanded a $20,000 surgery for free!
Comments
Why even offer to "help" when it means she can blackmail you later, you should never have seen her for free, a discount maybe, ONCE.
You're not in the wrong, she is taking advantage of you disgracefully!! Stick to your guns. Tell your husband that your business will go under if she continues to hava your services for free.Make sure your husband understands how much money you're losing every month and so now you need hee to pay. But tbh, with in-laws like this (including your husband) and anyone else agreeing with her, these are showing big red flags. She's using you, and they all want her to continue using you. 🚩🚩🚩. Take care of yourself!!!
Be straight forward in such matters.its your bread,don't fall for such people.
My biggest issue here is actually the husband. Why is op saying her salon is her only source of income, and why is he allowing her business to struggle? Does he not have a job? If he does, why is he not helping the business financially? And if he knows the business is struggling, why would he try to force his wife to give away free services? Thats strange because her business failing should negatively impact him and you would think the man would be freaking out trying every way possible to get the salon back on track. From my experience, what i believe is going on is the husband makes his own money just fine and isn't about sharing resources with his wife, so he doesn't care if her business crashes, he'll be fine.
You did the right thing, SIL is a moocher and hubby should be on your side with this, I'd definitely leave mine if treated me this way
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