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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

...to be shocked that my DM has sent me an itemised bill for staying at her house?

516 replies

UmBankroll · 29/08/2017 16:54

Sorry it's a long one. NC as I know some friends and family are Mumsnetters...

So, here's the story:

I'm the only child of a single mother, now in my mid-20s, moved abroad by myself when I was 18 to pursue my career. I come back to the UK every year to visit and stay with my mother for 2-3 weeks generally. Got married to my DH (who is a national of the country I live in) last year, and since getting married we have paid to stay in hotels nearby to my mother's house whenever we visit (3 times in the past 18 months).

This summer DH and I had the flexibility of being able to stay in the UK for longer, due to the fact that I quit my job and he had over a month off work. When discussing our plans with my mother during our visit back in February, she suggested we stay at her house rather than shell out for hotel accommodation for such a long time (prices are very high where she lives - prime location). DH and I were both happy with the idea so we agreed to it.

My mother's house needed a bit of attention in order to make it really comfortable for the 3 of us to co-habit for a month or so. Over a period of 3 months prior to our stay, I discussed with her the things she wanted fixing/changing as well as the alterations I wanted to make to my bedroom & bathroom. We agreed on all the refurbishments and I basically project managed from abroad whilst my mother handled things at the property. DH and I paid for absolutely everything. From two completely new bathrooms, new wooden floors throughout the whole house and new kitchen appliances, to a big new TV for the living room and lots of soft furnishings. DH and I spent upwards of £16k on all the updates (most of it on labour costs...!) and my mother was so happy with it, as were we during our stay. It ended up costing more than a hotel would have, but at least it's an investment in the property rather than just throwing the money away.

Since DH and I came back home just over a week ago, I received an email from my mother with a PDF attachment of an itemised bill for our stay at her house, listing the prices of literally everything down to the hand soap, bath towels and bed linen. Even food (although we regularly ate out or bought our own food from the supermarket and cooked for the 3 of us), and a % of the electricity bill and council tax. The bill she has written - addressed to me only - amounts to over £2000.

As a bit of back story, my mother has been struggling professionally of late (her roles are freelance and have been few and far between for quite some time) and I have bailed her out of a few financial troubles on several occasions over the past few years. At the end of last year, DH and I agreed to help her by taking over her monthly mortgage payment of £2500, which I have transferred monthly to her account ever since. It appears she has massively taken her foot off the gas in terms of trying to find work since we are taking care of this monthly payment. She's in her early 50s and in good health, but keeps dropping rather unsubtle hints about wanting to retire and be a full-time grandma (I'm pregnant with our first).

AIBU to be shocked and quite frankly appalled that she has sent me an itemised bill for the stay which SHE suggested in the first place, especially considering all the financial support we've been giving her anyway, plus taking care of renovating her home to the spec she wanted? AIBU to refuse to pay this bill? And AIBU to think she is seeing my DH (who is very successful) and I as one big meal ticket? It's unfair, it's embarrassing, it's putting an unnecessary pressure on my DH, and we are starting our own family and need to take care of ourselves - we can't bankroll her forever. I really don't know how to react or respond as I don't want to destroy my relationship with my mother, but I'm lost for words that she's taken it this far.

OP posts:
JemmyBloocher · 29/08/2017 18:44

So much here doesn't add up. The size of her mortgage, it needing to be done up before you could stay for a month or two. Very odd. You do know she's being unreasonable, but it all sounds so peculiar. Has she always had an odd and relationship, using you in this way and you being her doormat. You need to send her back a hard copy invoice for the outlay you have made, including morthage payments, fully itemised like her bill, for the work done plus your time. Deduct hers and demand the outstanding amount on a net 30 days. Seriously. Otherwise you are just reaping what you sow. Good luck.

ItsNachoCheese · 29/08/2017 18:45

Tell her to ram her invoice up her arse

Moanyoldcow · 29/08/2017 18:48

None of these figures make sense OP.

A reasonably basic bathroom would cost around £5k, and my living room LAMINATE floor cost £1000 alone and we fit it ourselves.

£16k would be a shoddy job indeed.

As others have said, those mortgage payments also are entirely made up.

There is a massive disconnect somewhere - just not sure where yet!

KatyBerry · 29/08/2017 18:48

The size of the mortgage makes sense for a short term loan of a large sum - and at her age and with a volatile career, terms would be very, very different to a standard high street mortgage

Hortonlovesahoo · 29/08/2017 18:52

What is your mum smoking?! I agree that she's looking at you as a cash cow. Stop paying her mortgage and either pay the bill and say: enough. Or just say: we'll deduct that from the 16k.

For those saying that 16k is too high, we were quoted 25k to do similar at my parents :-/

Therealjudgejudy · 29/08/2017 18:55

Good grief. You are a mug. More money than sense.

PurpleMinionMummy · 29/08/2017 18:58

Bought in the 80's means she's been paying a mortgage for between 28-37 yrs and it has another 15 yrs to run? A 43-52 yr mortgage? Shock

I assume she must have had an endowment policy if it was interest only, what happened to that?

icelollycraving · 29/08/2017 19:01

I do enjoy these threads, true or not.

TheEmmaDilemma · 29/08/2017 19:03

So this month her mortgage payment is only £500.

You deducted the cost of your stay, no?

Autofillcontact · 29/08/2017 19:03

I had a £3,000 interest only monthly payment on a £500k mortgage.

It can easily happen if the mortgage was taken out pre 2008 and she can't remortgage it (which she can't, due to no income and freelance)

Autofillcontact · 29/08/2017 19:03

Purple she's very obviously remortgaged since the 80s. Probably many times

IrritatedUser1960 · 29/08/2017 19:05

It's shocking, I am 55 and would not dream of doing that to my son or even of taking any of his money. I'm appalled.
I'd be having some very stern words with her and implying that you won't be visiting again if she is going to take advantage of you like this again.
Truly dreadful behaviour.

BikeRunSki · 29/08/2017 19:07

For goodness sake don't let her near your baby when it arrives, she'll bill you for childcare! Full time grandma, full time salary.

Giraffey1 · 29/08/2017 19:07

It sounds odd, to be honest. Why would you do all that work just because you were going to stay there for a few weeks? Why would you spend so much? Why would you give your mum so much €€€€ for her mortgage repayments and why are they so high? Why does she feel its appropriate to send you a bill for staying with her? None of it sounds very, errr, normal!

BigApples · 29/08/2017 19:11
Hmm
BigApples · 29/08/2017 19:13

Surely not.

Theycalledmethewildrose · 29/08/2017 19:18

Are you going to inherit your mum's house OP? Is that a guarantee and one of the reasons you renovated it/pay the mortgage?

Orangebird69 · 29/08/2017 19:21

Blatant placemarking with a big fat WTAF?

FatherJemimaRacktool · 29/08/2017 19:26

*Wow £16 for two bathrooms, new wooden flooring throughout, soft furnishings AND a new telly is an absolute steal!

Can you PM me the name of your builder please?*

You forgot the new kitchen appliances Jiggly. And most of the £16 was labour costs. So less than £8K for kitchen appliances, wooden flooring, TV, soft furnishings, and the contents and tiling for 2 bathrooms. For a £1.9m house. Grin

FatherJemimaRacktool · 29/08/2017 19:27

Sorry, should have been £16K not £16. Though £16 is about as realistic.

flowery · 29/08/2017 19:28

"two completely new bathrooms, new wooden floors throughout the whole house and new kitchen appliances, to a big new TV for the living room and lots of soft furnishings. DH and I spent upwards of £16k on all the updates (most of it on labour costs...!)"

That sounds more like £35k of work to me.

ShellyBoobs · 29/08/2017 19:33

That sounds more like £35k of work to me.

That is a very good point. I didn't even think about the figures quoted in this thread but we had a company in last week to look at just redoing one of the ensuites and they quoted more than that. In bloody Yorkshire!

Elledouble · 29/08/2017 19:37

No-one is that awful, surely.

If this is happening, stop payrolling her. It may be your "inheritance" but you're throwing good money after bad. Have the extra £2500 a month instead. I'd bloody love that.

JigglyTuff · 29/08/2017 19:41

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5rivers7hills · 29/08/2017 19:42

You d be lucky to get two bathrooms done for £16k

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