25 People Share Their Craziest Stories Of Nepotism At Work

Published 3 hours ago

Nepotism may seem like a Hollywood phenomenon—where nepo babies land acting, singing, or dancing roles with little skill—but it’s far more widespread. Everyday people, including those in regular workplaces, often use their connections to secure jobs for family and friends, even if they’re unqualified. This pattern of favouritism not only dampens team morale and productivity but also creates needless problems, yet it persists.

A recent post on the “Worksubreddit brought this issue into the spotlight, asking, “What are the craziest stories of nepotism at work?” The responses poured in, and we’ve featured some of the most egregious examples of workplace nepotism in the gallery below.

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#1

Image source: nuclearmonte, Rawpixel/Envato (not the actual photo)

My boss hired his almost 30 year old son to learn plumbing when the guy had never even turned a wrench in his life. 2 weeks later he fired him after he door dashed food to a job site and sat at a customer’s table eating it instead of working lol.

#2

Image source: ImportantBother5, Image-Source/Envato (not the actual photo)

My boss brought in his wife after our HR quit. Talk about nepotism. She is still involved with the company and it has been f’ing hell since she arrived.

#3

Image source: LongjumpingRespect96, JuiceDash/Envato (not the actual photo)

There’s this guy who was leader of a major country and he appointed family members to positions without having proper security clearances. Then a few years later he was even re-elected.

#4

Image source: Illustrious-Dirt5485, josecarloscerdeno/Envato (not the actual photo)

My boss once hired his cousin as a “consultant” who did nothing but sit in meetings and nod. Got promoted in 2 months. Nepotism at its finest.

#5

Image source: Dr_Spiders, AnnaStills/Envato (not the actual photo)

I worked in a family owned restaurant. The owner made her creep son a manager, despite the fact that he had no experience and was universally loathed by the staff. I caught him taking an up skirt pic of me while I was on a ladder setting up a display. I reported it to the owner, who denied it. The place was full of cameras, so I told her to check the video. She refused.

#6

Image source: More_Branch_5579, astakhovyaroslav/Envato (not the actual photo)

I was a teacher at a school when I truly learned about nepotism. My boss had many of her relatives in key positions. At one point, I needed a new teacher in my department so I just looked at her and asked “ don’t you have any more relatives that need a job”.

#7

Image source: EmDeeAech70, DC_Studio/Envato (not the actual photo)

My job was eliminated and I was let go so the HR manager’s favorite pet (her assistant) could have my housing.

#8

Image source: Sh*tzme, kitzstocker/Envato (not the actual photo)

My mother and I worked for the same company, just in different departments. She worked aged care, I worked in disabilities.

After years of consistent mistreatment and lack of help, I tried to move out of the disability sector and get into aged care. Not necessarily in the programs that my mother ran, just anywhere really. They wouldn’t let me, said it wouldn’t be fair to other staff.

So I stayed in a horrible job (that left me burnt out and with a permanent back injury yay) because at the time it was my only option. Cue to one day when all my easy shifts are cut and replaced with longer, harder ones, to make way for a new support worker. I fought this through my managers and HR but was ultimately told to suck it up and that it was all done legally. I’m not a petty person, I got along with the new support worker and we became friends pretty quickly. I didn’t find out straight away, but she was my bosses daughter.

Years later I go for an admin role to get out of my painful job. I had been doing this role for 8 months as an acting scheduler. I was told that I was not suitable for the position due to my lack of experience. They hired someone externally, one of the big managers son, he had no experience, having previously being only unemployed, he lasted a week.

Cue to my ending at this company. I had finally worked my way to a managerial position, running groups for PWD in a centre. My mother ran this centre and had done so for years, but being in different sectors, she wasn’t my boss and had nothing to do with me or my groups. The company decided this was ‘nepotism’, despite me being in the company for 12 years. So they removed my mother from this centre and put my boss in. Who proceeded to royally mess everything up.

She diverted funds from my groups to her failing ones, making it look as if we were in a huge deficit. She had no idea how to do her job, was always sick, working from home or in a ‘meeting’. Committed numerous fireable offences but wasnt even warned. Ended up totally destroying not only my groups which had been running for 30+ years, but the centre as a whole and a huge portion of the aged care sector. She didn’t even know the names of my staff or clients, but gave off this very wholesome, caring persona. Even after being violently assaulted by my ex partner, told me to continue coming to work as I didn’t want to let him effect my income (turns out we actually had DV leave which she chose not to tell me).

So I was fired, made redundant, told that I hadn’t been running the program efficiently and that it was all coming to an end. She went on holiday during my last months, didn’t even see me once before I left, although I was supposedly like a daughter to her.

They fired my mother too, while she was taking care of my dying stepdad, she had been there 21 years. Apparently she was less experienced than my boss who’d been there 3 years. Gave her a week before she had to leave, put on numerous farewell parties for the other staff they fired (not me though lol) and gave her nothing, then lied to the CEO saying they had put on a huge bash and given speeches. Then when my stepdad died, they told one of my mums friends they’d be sending a representative from the company. It was going to be my ex boss, the woman who got me fired and schemed with the upper managers to get my mother’s position. When we declined her offer and told her she was not welcome, she cried to mutual acquaintances that she was being ghosted and didn’t know what she’d done wrong.

#9

Image source: punkwalrus, AnnaStills/Envato (not the actual photo)

In 1998, I got a contract job from a director of operations at a airplane-related facility who asked me to install a server and client software on all the workstations because the son of the owner was “head of IT” and did nothing but play video games all day. The DO was pretty desperate, and paying me out of his own pocket. He didn’t go into much detail, except that the head of IT was less than useless, and this needed done and the son wasn’t doing it because he was less than useless. So I did it, it worked, yay! Easiest ten hours of work I ever did.

Two weeks later, the DO calls me again. Apparently, the son had “tried to make improvements,” messed it up, then wiped the server to cover up his tracks saying it was a hard drive error or something. So I got paid AGAIN to do the same job all over again. Even easier because I didn’t have to wait for the install to work on the workstations.

#10

Image source: Infamous_Top677, Pressmaster/Envato (not the actual photo)

My dad hired me and to avoid any appearance of nepotism treated me worse than anyone else hired, then negotiated to not have to pay my pto owed.

#11

Image source: Boring-Incident2469, Pressmaster/Envato (not the actual photo)

At my last job only my boss’s family had the option to WFH, everyone else had to be in the office full time.

#12

Image source: Amidormi, nuttapong_mohock/Envato (not the actual photo)

We hired a woman as a product owner of a product that her husband was a developer of. She was easily the worst PO I’d ever seen. Would start and end a sprint review in 2 minutes flat to avoid questions, and if it went any length of time, she completely ignored any questions like she didn’t hear them.

#13

Image source: 123ihavetogoweeeeee

The CFO’s husband worked for me. He was two years from retirement . He could not do his job. Literally. I sent him to training and he couldn’t do the bare minimum. I documented the lack of work, worked with HR, and his union rep. He eventually retired early. He said I caused him to have a heart problem by setting deadlines for his work.

#14

Image source: Mysterious-Present93, oneinchpunchphotos/Envato (not the actual photo)

Our VP hired her godson to work for one of her managers. Really incompetent in his role. And there was no clear connection- the VP had only been in our state for like 1-2 years and the godson never worked or lived out of state. The godson spilled the beans when he had a little too much to drink at a company event. Someone searched FB and found photos of them hanging out.

#15

Image source: Cool_Wealth969, luismanuelm/Envato (not the actual photo)

Worked in a luxury retirement home as the only pastry chef for 300 residents. The girl who was in charge of the waitresses did nothing but her makeup, wore no shoes in a professional establishment/nursing home. Hired nearly all her family members for nearly every position. She was not my boss. But would pull desserts saying they were unsuitable ( my boss tested and signed off on them earlier) take whole pies and cakes home then said we had none for service. It was a fight I did not want to continue due to mental health. No one deserves to be tormented at work.

#16

Image source: Darkogirl22, svitlanah/Envato (not the actual photo)

The person hired to do the common area cleaning for the apartment buildings I worked for was the owners adult daughter. Part of my job was to report the cleanliness of the buildings to her so she knew what to prioritize. I’d reach out multiple days in a row before she actually ever did anything about the issues, meanwhile her mom would be getting angry with me about the state of the buildings. It was ridiculous. She was being paid way more than me too and barely showed up to work. Company was also paying the child support for her new husband’s kids since he was so behind.

#17

Image source: laursasaurus, YuriArcursPeopleimage/Envato (not the actual photo)s

I have quite a few-
My co worker and boss would take smoke breaks together which turned into vacations together. Guess who the promotion went to? Not the ones who were covering for their vacations .

A director promoted his side piece up the ranks and then left his wife for her, claiming he wanted someone with similar career aspects

An admin was “obsessed” with one of the guys and he would act embarrassed that she would order him the fanciest equipment and bring him snacks all the time. One day he told everyone that he thought he saw her followed him home. She got laid off and the guy was treated as a hero for putting up with her. Years later it came out they had been dating but he convinced her to keep their relationship under wraps. He wanted to break up with her so he made her look crazy to the execs to get a clean break.

#18

Image source: Loweffort2025, AydinovKamran/Envato (not the actual photo)

Got fired without cause… boss put his son in my job the next week.

#19

Image source: Plus_Word_9764, AirImages/Envato (not the actual photo)

Chairman at nonprofit hired his daughter and we were all forced to listen to hear talk about anything and everything, never allowed to disagree when it came to work, and even the c-suite people had to make sure she was boosted and well liked. I doubt the daughter was even aware, but god it was exhausting. She did this as a thing just to to and was actually trying to be an actress. So she would come and go when she pleased (still did the work on her own time to her credit). But it would get tiresome listening to her problems, lies (how she complained about rent but literally owns her apt), and would just get up and travel when she pleased and needed a break. It was too hard to be around someone like this constantly especially when her literal income was just fun money.

#20

Image source: FrontFew1249, s_kawee/Envato (not the actual photo)

A branch manager that the CEO really liked manoeuvred to have her mom hired as a deposit operations specialist. Over the next three years, they managed to scheme their way into getting all of the region’s office supplies (toilet paper, cleaning products, paper towels, etc) delivered to the daughter’s specific branch, which was small, out of the way, and not our headquarters.

Obviously, they were taking a significant portion of the supplies home, despite the fact that they were both extremely well off, with the mother living in an over a million dollar valued house in a moderate cost of living area. The daughter would buy really nice Brawny paper towels for “her branch”, but they ran out constantly and everyone else got the cheap stuff. Eventually someone, somewhere caught on and the supplies were delivered to each branch instead of the one, but they never got in trouble or anything. I think it would have been too embarrassing for the CEO to admit what had been happening.

The branch manager was eventually fired for some bs reason. I have no doubt her and her mom’s little stunt contributed, as she was fired pretty quickly after the supplies stopped going only to her.

#21

Image source: Shot-Challenge9717, solerfotostock/Envato (not the actual photo)

Absentee owner hired a manager who hired her family to “work” there. They did nothing, while the rest of us struggled to get the most basic things done. Business went under. .

#22

Image source: Prestigious_Day_5242, dmitrytph/Envato (not the actual photo)

Current hierarchy: Owner, Me, His Daughter.

Hours last week: Owner – 40
Me – 8
His Daughter – 40

I have a mortgage and a car payment, she lives at home and has no bills.

#23

Image source: msut77, traimakivan/Envato (not the actual photo)

Not a small mom and pop but an outpost of a very large foreign company. Big bosses brother in law. Fired at least twice for gross incompetence and chiseling. Kept hiring him back. Got the dude promoted to management with a HS diploma. Could barely spell an email.

#24

Image source: icnoevil, LightFieldStudios/Envato (not the actual photo)

The current UNC Football coach hired his two sons to work with him on the team, despite strict university no nepotism rules. Wonder how that happened?

#25

Image source: Ohio_guy65, s_kawee/Envato (not the actual photo)

Used to work for a small computer firm that got bought out. The new company consolidated into one new building basically the day after the merger. Second day in this office my department manager, his first day on the job, comes in to introduce himself. His actual first words, “Hi I’m the worthless brother-in-law every company has”.

Took about an hour to find out he was the owner’s brother-in-law who needed a job. He was the software development manager. Previous experience, retail shift supervisor.

Shanilou Perera

Shanilou has always loved reading and learning about the world we live in. While she enjoys fictional books and stories just as much, since childhood she was especially fascinated by encyclopaedias and strangely enough, self-help books. As a kid, she spent most of her time consuming as much knowledge as she could get her hands on and could always be found at the library. Now, she still enjoys finding out about all the amazing things that surround us in our day-to-day lives and is blessed to be able to write about them to share with the whole world as a profession.

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crazy, job, nepo, nepotism, unhinged, work, workplace
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