Buckle up, folks! We’ve got a juicy house-sharing tale that’s sure to get your wheels turning! Four friends, one house, and a parking predicament that’s causing quite the commotion. The original poster, let’s call him the ‘Parking Prince’ , is in a bit of a bind. He’s been paying extra for that coveted parking spot, but now a new housemate, the ‘Wheelchair Warrior’ ♿, is rolling in and shaking things up! ️ The Parking Prince is standing his ground, refusing to give up his spot without compensation. Is he being petty or principled? Let’s dive into this drama and see what unfolds!
The House-Sharing Dilemma: A Tale of Four Friends
The Parking Predicament: Who Pays More?
The Departing Roommate and the New Arrival
♿ The Unanimous Decision: Parking for the Wheelchair User
The Extra Cost Conundrum: Who Should Pay?
♂️ The Refusal: Advertised Price vs. Suitability
The Compromise: Splitting the Difference
The Landlord’s Stance: Not Getting Involved
The Accusations: Petty and Inconsiderate?
The Deposit Dilemma: Misadvertised Price
♂️ The Principle: Splitting the Difference
The Parking Prince vs. The Wheelchair Warrior: A House-Sharing Showdown! ♂️
Well, well, well… looks like the Parking Prince is in quite the pickle! He’s been paying extra for that sweet parking spot, but now the Wheelchair Warrior is rolling in and claiming it as his own. The Prince isn’t backing down though, he’s demanding compensation or threatening to keep using the spot himself! Talk about a parking power struggle! The housemates are calling him petty, but the Prince is standing his ground on principle. He’s even holding the departing roommate’s deposit hostage until this mess is sorted out! This is one house-sharing drama that’s sure to leave skid marks! Let’s see what the internet has to say about this wild ride!
Friend falsely advertised parking space, NTA for refusing to pay.
Fairness questioned over high parking fee for disabled housemate
Disabled man stands up for himself in parking dispute
Supportive reply deems OP NTA in parking conflict
Split the fee or pay the whole $100/month. NTA.
Negotiating parking spot rent between roommates. NTA has leverage.
Fairness in paying for parking spot, disability not a factor
Roommate conflict over parking and rent, NTA wins.
Disabled man stands up against entitled housemate’s demand for cash
Don’t open someone else’s wallet in the name of justice
Fairness questioned: NTA shouldn’t pay extra for surrendered parking spot
Fairness prevails in parking dispute. NTA wins the spot
Former roommate is TA for false advertising accessible parking. Split cost.
Disabled man’s entitled demand for parking space sparks debate.
Kindness is not a blank check. NTA for not paying.
Former roommate’s fault, don’t return deposit. NTA
New roommate not responsible for previous tenant’s parking arrangement. #NTA
Roommate demands cash from disabled man for parking, NTA explains
Fair to charge for parking space, person in wheelchair should clarify.
Creative solution for parking dispute involving disability ♿
Disabled man denied parking space, roommates are both at fault
Disabled person demanded free parking, commenter defends paying extra. NTA
Pay extra for space, not for being disabled. NTA.
“Fair options offered. Whoever uses space pays. New roomie entitled”
Fair point! Paying for parking space is reasonable.
Rent advertised as $800, tenant demands extra cash for parking
Reasonable offer made for parking spot, NTA
Fair pricing, fair rules. New roommate can’t change that
Got a point, NTA but leaseholder should be involved in rentals
New guy wants parking space? He pays for it.
Demanding payment for a parking spot from a disabled man
Parking dispute reveals true colors of friend and new guy
Disabled man not obligated to pay for housemate’s parking. NTA
Clear and fair parking spot arrangement, NTA for enforcing it
Housemate tries to demand cash from disabled man for parking spot
Fairness in parking payment. Disability doesn’t exempt from payment.
Fair solution proposed for parking dispute involving disabled man
Fair point, sharing the cost was a kind gesture
Your house, your rules. Roommate can move on. NTA
Fair or not? Charging extra for parking in shared house
Stand your ground! NTA. Your parking spot, your rules.
Fairness in rent and parking: NTA stands up for themselves
Fairness prevailed. Disabled man not obliged to pay more.
Accepting reality of disabilities and accommodating is being NTA
Fairness in parking fees debated in housemate dispute
Stand your ground! Your parking space, your rules. NTA
Others won’t volunteer money but expect you to pay? NTA
Wheelchair user deserves fair parking even if it raises rent
Disabled person not at fault for inaccessible housing extra cost
Polite correction of ableist language in NTA comment.
Friend demands cash from disabled man for parking spot. NTA.
Fair judgement, parking spot not advertised. Keep it for yourself
Stand your ground, roommate pays if they want the spot. NTA
Stand your ground! New roommate is a j**k
Clearing up a parking dispute over $800 rent with info.
Questions around disability parking policy and advice not to pay.
Be firm and don’t let them bully you into paying
Fair pricing debate in parking dispute – NTA takes stand
Offering to split extra cost with unreasonable housemate. NTA.
Suggestion to split cheaper parking cost without being TA
Roommate shouldn’t demand cash for parking spot you gave up
Stand your ground and don’t let them take advantage
Accommodating disability doesn’t rule out being TA
Disabled man not at fault for housemate’s parking dispute
Disabled man not the a**hole for keeping his parking space
Disabled man stands up to unjust demand for parking payment
Stand your ground and demand fair compensation for your spot
Disabled man not entitled to parking space, housemate not the a**hole.
Standing up against unjust demands
Keep using your space, NTA. New guy had his chance
Housemate falsely advertised parking for disabled person, NTA not responsible.
Paying extra for disabled spot is ableist. NTA.
Friend should have clarified parking cost, special arrangement not in writing
Last Updated on May 4, 2024 by Diply Social Team