Partner comes home at 4:30 am from partying, waking up girlfriend and then refusing to leave her bed in the day, girlfriend calls them out

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Am I in the wrong for stopping my partner working from my bed?

Preface: My partner (I'll now refer to as P) has temporarily moved into my home while they are looking for a place of their own to live. My partner also frequently goes out on a weeknight and goes home in the early hours of the morning. We both work from home. I work from a home office, my partner, when they are here generally elects to work from the kitchen.
Last night, P went out and I was woken up at 4:30am on their return so I am rather cranky this morning after interrupted sleep. This morning, P started working from my bed. I asked P to get up and move to the kitchen because I don't like my bedsheets getting all stanked out. After resistance, I moved P's laptop into the kitchen
and told them if they want to work, they need to get up. I was met with a response of "I'm controlling" and "This is a dictatorship", but I don't think this is the case. I just don't want to have my home disrespected in this way, and for a precedent to be set for P to be able to come home to my place as and when they please with no regard for my sleep or environment.
So the question is, who is the ah le here? Throwaway account for obvious reasons. Also, I've checked to make sure none of rule 8 was broken.

Commenters gave their opinions and takes on this.

Mamapalooza Friend, this man has no intention of leaving. EDIT: Friend, this person has no intention of leaving.
Pine_Valley NTA. Working from someone else's bed after waking them up in the middle of the night is incredibly r de. Pro-tip for the future: don't move their stuff next time, just tell them directly that the relationship isn't working under one roof and speed up the move-out process
Minkz333 Why are you dating someone who stinks
Strong_District_5894 NTA It's your home. It is not a democracy. If they can't respect your space they can't be in it. Think hard on whether or not you want to continue this. Their comments are manipulative.
G-reeper66 Either work in the kitchen or find your own place! Sorry to say but it sounds. like you have got yourself a hobosexual as a partner.
titaincognita NTA, it's your home and it needs to be respected. But, why are you letting someone you yourself says makes your bed stink in your bed in the first place??? Your bed shouldn't stink unless you haven't washed them lately, and that's a separate issue enterly.
RawrRRitchie Is your "partner" even looking for a place? Most relationships the future is to move to a place together that they share.. Why are you in a relationship with someone if you want to live separately? Also how exactly does a laptop "stink up the bed"
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Catlenfell Dude is going out partying instead of looking for a place. They assume that they have a bunch of extra money since they no longer pay rent.
Negative_One_5845 NTA. They already ruined your sleep, and now they're squatting in your bed all day while you're trying to work. Wanting your own bedsheets to stay clean and private isn't "controlling," it's a basic boundary. Your partner is acting like a choosing beggar. You are providing them a place to live; the absolute least they can do is respect your space.
ArmouredEscort NTA, they're being disrespectful of your home. If they can't respect coming home quietly and not working from bed then I would reconsider the relationship, especially as you've been gracious enough to let them live with you, presumably without paying rent.
modular Girl (gender neutral), don't move in with them. I had a variation of this pickle with my husband before we moved in together and he was way more respecting and never called me controlling
OriginalParticle NTA, frankly... YOUR house, YOUR rules and they have shown zero respect for that or for you to be honest. Sounds like they need to find another place to stay and work.
QueenComfort637 For real OP? You need to ask if it's okay for a guest to wake you in the middle of the night is inconsiderate? And to not follow your completely reasonable request/expectations in your own home? It goes without saying that you're NTA. But why are you being such an AH to yourself?
allyearswift Dating is for finding out whether you're compatible with every time you move up - a step and moving together is a very important step for this reason - you find out more things about your partner.
You're finding out that P is happy to go out and come back at 4.30 in the morning, regardless of whether they wake you up; that they feel comfortable enough to squat in a space that's for sleep and, err, adult activities, and that they don't respect your wishes at all.
I don't think 'no laptops in bed' is a bad rule, but when you say 'hey, partner, this is a thing I'm not comfortable with' a goid partnet will listen, and if it doesn't cost them much (like getting up and walking to the kitchen in their pyjamas) they'll say
sorry and just do it. (At other times, they may ask questions to understand why you're not comfortable and offer a compromise. Sometimes we have conflicting access needs or habits, but 'well, it works for me, so you need to be uncomfortable' is NEVER the foundation for a good partnership.
NTA, but this looks like a relationship ender. It's not the laptop in bed, it's the boundary trampling and the accusations of dictatorship.

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