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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to expect SIL spends a similar amount of our kids as we do on hers, even though we have 3?!

86 replies

Schooldilemma2345 · 18/11/2021 16:59

I probably could have worded that a bit better! Essentially I’m asking whether it’s acceptable for my sister in law to expect us to spend £40 on her only child and then only spend £15 on each of our children? I’m wondering if it’s because we have 3!
For context: we asked SIL what her child would like for Xmas and the suggested Amazon link costs £40. She rarely asks what our children would like and the presents they receive are always pretty inexpensive or something she’s picked up at the school fair. On one occasion is was a knitted teddy type thing each which couldn’t have cost more then a fiver. Recently she sent us a message asking us to buy a particular item of clothing for her child that cost around £25 as a birthday present. She didn’t mention my son’s birthday which is a few days before her child’s. We obliged and then as an after thought she transferred £15 into our account as a birthday present for my son. She didn’t send a card or wish him happy birthday or anything. Last year for Xmas she said she would like to buy the present from us to her child. We had a family gathering at our house just before xmas and she dumped a bag of stuff on me to urgently wrap while I was hosting. She then told me what I owed her which was £30. The presents she gave my children would not have cost anything like that amount.
For the record I don’t begrudge spending £40 on her child but I do feel it’s somewhat more than the average amount that side of the family spend on each other and it feels a little greedy given what her budget is!
She is very focused on her child but she will almost always forget my children’s and my husbands birthdays. She never asks what they want.
For the record she is very well off financially, think several holidays a year- annual ski trip is a human right! We, by comparison are much less well off, we are self employed and our business has been hit very hard by the pandemic. I genuinely don’t feel remotely jealous btw- I just feel we are a bit less materialistic as a family generally. I wanted to make the distinction before people say perhaps she can’t afford to spend more.
I don’t expect everything to be even to the penny and I know my kids don’t need her to spend a fortune on them. They’re very lucky and are grateful for what they receive.
It’s just the disparity in budget and also attitude that I’m finding a bit odd but perhaps it’s me who is wrong here.
So, AIBU- yes- a budget should be total per family, split between how ever many siblings are in the family.
Not unreasonable- each child should receive a gift of roughly the same value even if one is an only child and there are 3 kids in other family.

OP posts:
FreeBritnee · 18/11/2021 19:09

I received a present back that I’d bought for my nephew as apparently it wasnt good enough. It honestly is the height of rudeness. Personally I’d decide what you actually want to spend and give her the amount on an Amazon gift card or similar. Then she can choose but you can decide the amount.

woodhill · 18/11/2021 19:13

@FreeBritnee

I received a present back that I’d bought for my nephew as apparently it wasnt good enough. It honestly is the height of rudeness. Personally I’d decide what you actually want to spend and give her the amount on an Amazon gift card or similar. Then she can choose but you can decide the amount.
Then I wouldn't bother any more, how rude of him
LoveComesQuickly · 18/11/2021 19:17

I started off thinking YABU (I have three DC, my brother has one, I would expect him to spend less on mine per child) but on reading your later comment she sounds awful. Stopping asking what her DC would like and getting a £25 voucher sounds like a good plan.

AwaAnBileYerHeid · 18/11/2021 19:34

You can't really expect her to spend 3 x the amount on your family that you spend on her family, I certainly wouldn't.

DeepaBeesKit · 18/11/2021 19:42

My sibling has more children than I. The amount we spend is fixed per child and that's fine by me. Its not her children's fault they have more siblings.

ThinWomansBrain · 18/11/2021 19:51

just tell her that you need to cut back, and stop the gift merry go round

LivingLaVidaBabyShower · 18/11/2021 19:56

I think you posed the question strangely so are getting mixed responses.

Yanbu to chose whatever you want to gift.
I wouldn't let her dictate or ask what she wants. If you do explain its "ideas for £20 max"
She sounds tone deaf/unaware as well as entitled and rude.

Buy what you like and next time she tells you to ebay it and give her the money tell her to ebay it herself.

Cheeky cow!!!

Rubadubdub21 · 18/11/2021 19:57

You want your sil to spend £40 on each of your 3 kids because you've spent £40 on hers?
Sorry if I've read that wrong but if I haven't, that's £120 on your kids. That isn't right. £15x 3 = £45 is even.

Undertheoldlindentree · 18/11/2021 20:54

I am staggered by all this calculation and comparison. We have several sets of siblings and one solo child in the extended family. We all gave each other's children gifts to the approximate value of £10 (when they were tiny) to £20-25 (inflation and grown to teens). The DC are all cousins and if they're all opening gifts at the grandparents on Boxing Day, there's no way anyone wants one child receiving gifts three times the value of the others, just because they don't have siblings. That would be valuing money than the individual children we all love. The whole thing is for the shared experience of the children, not souring it by some sort of tit -for-tat balancing act by parents. If the disparity thing really bothers you, drop the budget to £10 for everyone so it's not a big issue. Or if you must even things out somehow, treat tge children equally but take a nice bottle of liqueur/box of luxury truffles along for the parents of the smaller family.

Naughtynovembertree · 18/11/2021 21:28

Op.
Is she struggling? A single parent, has less then you?
Can you afford to spend a something on her dc? If yes, then just do it and ask for money in a card for your dc, something she can afford.

If your both even, she doesn't have 100s to buy t for. more.. Equal money etc then just put an end to it all.
Give her child a tenner in a card and say nothing for your dc.

Buying gifts should be a pleasure never ever a chore.

Hesma · 18/11/2021 21:55

She is spending £45, you are spending 40… similar amounts to me. I think YABU to expect her to spend £120 on your DC

Nayday · 18/11/2021 22:23

If the present suggestions are over budget simply ignore and purchase the gift of your choice. If she asks about the original gift (rude) you can simply confirm it was over your budget.

Spend as much as you want to and let her do her presents her way (although her way does sound rubbish).

And if someone thrusts a bag of gifts at you while you're hosting, hand them back and let them know you don't have time to wrap them!

tallduckandhandsome · 18/11/2021 22:26

Stop asking for suggestions. If she asks for a gift, tell her you’ve already bought a present.

JurgensCakeBaby · 18/11/2021 22:32

DB and SIL always spend a little more on DS than I do for DNs if they ask for suggestions I always give cheaper options, I spend about £45/50 on each of them on birthdays and closer to £40 at Christmas. DS' birthday is coming up and SIL called and said they'd bought him a couple of things they know he reacts but they want to get him something else, I told them that was more than enough he gets plenty and she said oh yes but we have two and we don't feel right you spending almost double. I hadn't even considered it until she said it. I told her it's not the way I see it, and to not worry the things she's bought DS will love. We can all afford it though, so I think that makes it less of an issue.

SquidGame999 · 18/11/2021 22:34

My friend has 4 kids, I have 1. She said she doesn't feel comfortable with me spending 4 times the amount on her kids so I spend £5 on each of them and she spends £20 on my one. I think it's fair and I was glad she suggested it as I don't have a lot of money.

NellieBertram · 18/11/2021 22:38

If you spend £40 on her one child and she spends £15 each on your three isn't that about equal?

When she sends you a suggestion for her kid's present why not reply saying "great, mine would like xyz".

Hankunamatata · 18/11/2021 22:43

I think it's reasonable that each family spends the same so if she spends £10 per child then you buy £30 present for her son. However since she was rude enough to hand back a present I would have stopped present swapping there and then

MysteriousMonkey · 18/11/2021 23:15

I buy, wrap and tag presents from my SIL and brother for my kids and she does the same for hers from me. I don't know what she's spends tbh and don't need to know Grin

LittleOwl153 · 18/11/2021 23:36

On one occasion she actually gave me back to present and suggested I sold it on eBay and gave her child the money instead.

That would be the last time I bought anything anything her or her child. That is so rude!

I would not be spending £40 if your budget is less than that. I'd go with the £20/25 voucher if you must.

NoSquirrels · 18/11/2021 23:47

I would like to spend about £25- I feel comfortable with that.

So spend that. Ask for suggestions within your budget - Hey, sis, what would DN like fir Christmas- £25ish?

If she replies with stuff out of budget, say either
‘Bit over budget, I’m afraid- I’ve got £25 to spend. Any other suggestions?’

And if none in budget are forthcoming say ‘No worries - I’ll put a £25 voucher in a card and DN can put it towards what he’d like’

Lockdownbear · 18/11/2021 23:48

Op if it doesn't fit your budget then just say no or give a voucher / money they can put towards it.

Beebababadabo · 18/11/2021 23:58

What happened to giving gifts just because you want to and love the person. All this back and forth. Just stop the gift giving or give the amount you wanting a card if all the suggestions are £40 worth

KimmyKimdoo · 19/11/2021 00:00

We do £30/ child in the family. We have two, all other families have one child each. Everyone spends twice as much on ours technically but we don’t think of it like that. If my brother suggested spending £15 on each of ours, I’d be spending £15 on his child too. It’s the same for all or we’d just stop doing presents altogether.

Garfunkle · 19/11/2021 02:09

Recently she sent us a message asking us to buy a particular item of clothing for her child that cost around £25 as a birthday present

I have never bought an item of clothing for my nieces/nephews. I see clothing as something parents should buy for their own children.

You have 3 children. Your db has one child. Agree an amount to spend on Christmas/birthday presents. If you spend £40 on a gift for your dn then it’s only fair that db spends £40 on gifts between your dc

waitingpatientlyforspring · 19/11/2021 05:51

Suggest she buys for her child on behalf of you and you buy for your children on behalf of her. No exchange of cost, you each just cover what you decide to spend.

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