41 answers

Which One Teenager or 8Yr Old Gets Larger Room?

I have a dilemma on deciding which one of our kids gets the larger room in a new house we just rented. We our selling our larger home that had a living and family room down stairs that we turned into computer and art station and we also had a bonus room upstairs to watch tv in. Now the rental home we are moving into only has living and . separate family room off the kitchen to make into the tv/computer/workout room. Which I'm fine with and actually glad to be down sizing. But here's the dilemma: this house is an older home but its pretty nice all in all so that means the two bedrooms that aren't the master are diffrent sizes. The 1st one is smaller and has a med size closet, but the other one is bigger (not a whole lot, but it is bigger) and has 2 closets that are just a little smaller then the 1st bedroom's medium closet. Now I want to be fair but also logical and practical in making the decision. My husband and I dont agree or see eye to eye on this situation either. So I need other input from parents. Our 15 yr old already claimed "dibs" on the bigger bedroom and my husband agreed to it without all of us discussing it. And in most cases or diffrent circumstances I would have to agree. Older kid gets bigger room its perks of being the oldest, but in our case my 8 yr old has more stuff and actually plays in her room. They both have these wall units with color bins and shelves with a desk area we built for them. But my youngest has a separate book shelf for all her kid books that she reads and she has this almost 5ft tall wooden barbie house that I keep In her closet so it don't take up floor space and she plays with it all the time. I also put 2 extra shelves in her closet to keep smaller totes on for barbie clothes accessories ect. And for things like her large bin of the big sized legos and the a big round container of tinker toys. Her stuffed animals we have downsized to only 2 shelf spaces of her only most favorite ones. I have gotten rid of a lot of her toys, and have condensed and organized what she does have. So she has a place for everything and with the wall unit she has floor space to play ded3with the toys that we have kept. In our old house I had to put my youngest daughters dresser in the hall by laundry room, cause the barbie house and toys needed a place to go. But in this new rental I will have to put her dresser back In her room again. Which also will take up more space. So she has 3 large pieces of furniture more then her15yr old sister does. But I am getting my oldest a full sized bed that she needs and getting rid of the crappy old queen mattress that use to be mine. But she doesn't have toys and doesn't have so many books that can't go on her wall unit, she doesn't have a dresser cause I planned on putting up closet shelving for her. She has a lot of small possessions vs. her sister having the larger stuff. And she can put all that stuff on her wall unit. And another point I might add is that she doesn't hang out in her room much other then for sleeping, putting on makeup and doing homework. She usually is on the computer in the family room or watching tv while she is doing her drawings. So what would you parents do if in my situation? I need to make a decision in a couple days because I am going to start painting before we move in and I need to repaint both of their rooms to coordinate with their decor. My youngest was so heartbroken that I finally was able to after Christmas decorate and paint her room Like her big sis did. And now we have to move. But thankfully landlord gave me the ok to paint. I really want to be fair and make everyone happy. But I don't always agree that just because your older you should automatically get the larger room. Considering all the aspects of the situation. I think my youngest should get the larger room because she has larger stuff and she actually plays on her room. But my oldest she doesn't spend a whole lot of time in her room as of now and next year she will be 16 and probably driving and working a little to pay for driving. she'll be off to the mall or wherever teens hang out with their friends these days. I'm thinking ahead to the future, because if I have to paint and remount wall units and I want to only do it once. And if my older kid won't be at home as Much as the youngest in a year or 2 anyway. so I don't see the point of giving her the bigger room if " I" will have to redo do it and switch rooms in a year or 2. So your opionions, advice, and experience is greatly appreciated. Thanks for taking the time to read.

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

We will be in this rental till the youngest graduates high-school.
I'm am reading your responses and taking them in. The majority seems to agree with older one gets bigger room. I appreciate your folk's input and diffrent incite to the situation. Keep em coming I'm really interested in your opinions. Please know I'm not trying to choose furniture or a barbie house over my oldest or rewarding my youngest with toys. Books on a book shelf, and dresser and 1 large toy of a barbie house that actually use to be for my oldest daughters too. And trust me, my 15yr has toys over her own. hers are just more expensive. Like I said her possessions are smaller and will fit on her wall unit. My issues about it is more about my oldest doesn't spend a lot of time in her room that she has now, in the large house we have to sell.shehangs out in computer/art room or is reading her books downstairs on the couch or dawing on couch watching tv. When her friends do come over there isn't a whole lot of hanging in her room. But my youngest does play in her room a lot, and reads and watches movies, and plays with friends in her room. And she has the three extra largest pieces of furniture then her sister does. I'm just throwing that out there. Because those reasons are what is making the decision difficult for me. If my oldest spent as much time in her room as my youngest did then it really wouldn't be a big debate. We won't allow her to have a computer in her her room to use it privately. Otherwise we would never see her come out of her room.

Featured Answers

Teenager
reasons:
1) All this going on and on about how much more stuff the little one has makes me think she's already spoiled, favored, how ever you want to put it.
2) You need to back dad and his decisions
3) She is the big sister. There are new responsibilites coming her way all the time. There are supposed to be some perks that go along with it.
4) The little one needs to hear the word NO every once in a while.

8 moms found this helpful

Give it to the younger one with the toys. The older one probably will appreciate that the younger one is occupied in a separate space

4 moms found this helpful

Sorry, but it is no question in my mind, part of being the oldest is you get the better stuff - in this case bigger room. I do not understand the debate here. Plus, if you are renting you will probably NOT be in this home in a few years.

4 moms found this helpful

More Answers

Teenager
reasons:
1) All this going on and on about how much more stuff the little one has makes me think she's already spoiled, favored, how ever you want to put it.
2) You need to back dad and his decisions
3) She is the big sister. There are new responsibilites coming her way all the time. There are supposed to be some perks that go along with it.
4) The little one needs to hear the word NO every once in a while.

8 moms found this helpful

The older child get to choose.
And she has. End of story.

Younger one can have it when she moves out.

But for some reason, you seem hell-bent on your way, so I wonder why you're even asking for opinions.
Maybe your 8 year old has too much stuff?

7 moms found this helpful

I would also point out, while you are planning "for the future" that your older daughter may very well have friends over and want some privacy, and my begin hanging out in her bedroom with her friends, as they all get more "mobile" with transportation.

You said you are downsizing your home overall, so perhaps your older daughter may naturally gravitate to a more private space to do her drawing. She's 15, and having friends over to "do hair" and "do nails" and "do makeup" in the privacy of her bedroom might become more prominent activities for her. They might not... but they might. At 15, they are all still having to have mom/dad drive them around. In a year... they may not need that and you might have a lot more visits from her friends.

She also may want privacy in her room for other things. At her age, I was doing exercise videos (well, when I was her age, there weren't really videos, it was more like cassette tapes, lol) and work-outs in my bedroom with the stereo on. I wouldn't have been caught dead doing that in a family area of the house. And jumping around to music requires SPACE.

Just another angle to think about...

7 moms found this helpful

Older kid was there first... she gets the bigger room.

7 moms found this helpful

Choosing a Barbie house over your teenager (which is how shell see it, and honestly, I do as well even though I can also see your side) is setting the next 3 years up for a fall. And making the 15 yo feel shoved out and unimportant by sticking her in a little room because she's leaving... Honestly, it's a good way to guarantee she stays away (at friends) and that she gets a lifelong (or years long) resentment toward your youngest. Assuming she doesn't hate her little sister, I wouldn't light that match!

It's a couple days worth of work to redo. A couple days, versus years and years of bitterness, hurt feelings, and a wedge in 2 relationships (mother/daughter and sister/sister) just would NOT be worth it to me.

In 3 years, trade rooms when eldest goes to college. A room for her to come home to in break, and the big room for your 11 year old. Right of passage handoff.

ALTERNATIVELY... You and hubby could have the little room. If that rankles, times it by 10 for how your teen will feel. If it doesn't (since you have the rst of the house) then go for it. Kid A in master, kid b in big room, parents in little room/rest of house.

6 moms found this helpful

Older kid = bigger room.

Let your younger daughter move some toys like the Barbie house into the tv/computer/workout room.

Paint the bigger room in something that your younger daughter would be able to adapt to in a few years, and when your older daughter goes off to school or moves out, your younger can take that room and your older can come home to the smaller room if she's living at school.

6 moms found this helpful

I think that the teenager should get the bigger room.

Why? Because being older SHOULD come with perks. And the younger one should see that. When your teen moves out, the younger one will be excited to "take over" that space because they'll then be the oldest in the house.

It doesn't matter who has bigger stuff, really. You can make either room work. What matters is who is getting preference for the "good stuff," like the bigger room, the front seat in the car, the bigger allowance....all should be for the older child.

ETA: I also agree with many of the posters below: It sounds like you're rewarding your younger child for having more toys. Sounds to me like you have a favorite and aren't afraid to fight for her to have more/better stuff. Be careful with that....

6 moms found this helpful

I think the older one should get the bigger room as well. The scenario that you are advocating is basically rewarding your younger daughter for having more toys. Believe me, this is the sort of thing that can cause lifelong resentment between sisters.

Maybe you can make a deal with your daughters - the younger one can get the big room when the older one moves out and they both have to help you make the switch so that the work of mounting wall units and painting (or whatever) isn't all on you. You could also have your older girl help you get the rooms ready now as part of the deal.

5 moms found this helpful

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