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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Parent gifts/Inheritance- unfair?

429 replies

ducksandquackers · 11/06/2023 18:14

I’ll start with a little background, my parents were both from low income families, my dad went on to be a lawyer and my mum a teacher. My dad is now 77 my mum passed away 6 years ago.
I have one brother, he’s 50, I’m 42. He has one daughter who is 18, I have one son who is 8 months.
When my mum passed away my dad sold their home, bought a small one bedroom flat. Never really thought twice about what happened with the money. I guess I assumed it was out away in savings or something similar.
My brother is an accountant, makes £150,000+ a year, his wife passed away 7 years ago, he used her life insurance to pay off their mortgage and has been financially comfortable since. I’m a nurse, my husband a police officer. We aren’t struggling per se but in my family we are the worst off.

We met for a family meal last night, my brother, niece, husband, dad and son. I asked my niece if the new student loan changes would impact her as she’s due to go to uni after summer. She said no, she wouldn’t be getting a student loan. My husband joked asking how she would afford everything then and she said “Grandad gave me money for course fees and Accomodation”. I could tell my dad and brother didn’t want that to be something I knew.
I questioned my brother today. He told me when my dad sold the house, he gave a chunk of the money (£150,000) to my niece. At the time I’d said I’d never have children, so he wanted to give it to his granddaughter now rather than once he’s gone and can’t see her make use of it. My brother and I would get the split of the flat he’s currently in, anything left in pensions and some moneys he’s saved after he passes.
Now when I didn’t have kids this would be fair I think. I get that. But I do have a son now, not only has he missed out on a grandma on my side, and a grandad young enough to be able to play and look after him, he’s missed out on holidays with grandparents and all sorts. But also, he’s missed out on inheritance.
For years my brother has been putting £500-£1000 a month in savings for my niece, so she has a good amount in savings anyway. My husband and I have a mortgage and don’t make enough to save that sort of money for my son. My husbands parents won’t leave much in the way of inheritance and what they do is split between 6 grandkids.

So AIBU to think it’s not fair my niece gets all the money from my parents house? Even if she was the only grandchild at the point of the deal? She isn’t now and surely my son is just as entitled to that as she is? Should I talk to my dad?

OP posts:
vibecheck · 13/06/2023 09:30

I can’t believe how nasty you’re being about your niece. The jabs about her intelligence are so unnecessary and cruel, from an aunt about a girl who lost her mother when she was extremely young. She’s essentially a child - barely 18 - and this isn’t really anything to do with her, and it’s certainly not her fault.

Honestly, why should she share her gift with a woman who hates her.

MichelleScarn · 13/06/2023 09:39

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 12/06/2023 22:51

I feel for you OP and not sure why everyone else is being sanctimonious- it's perfectly reasonable to expect parents to treat children equally (even if one is a fave!) and if one child gets more it should surely be the child and their family who have less cash and more debt

if one child gets more it should surely be the child and their family who have less cash and more debt
With that reasoning you believe that one child could work full time and live within their means, the other not work and live beyond their means and off of credit cards and this child should get more money in inheritance?

Zebedee55 · 13/06/2023 09:56

If DF has to go into a care home, or need a lot of extensive "in home" care, there might not be any inheritance left to argue over when he dies.

I've known it to happen, time and time again.

Life isn't fair, but that's how it works.😗

Best just to get on with life, and not worry about inheritances.

Lefteyetwitch · 13/06/2023 11:19

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 13/06/2023 09:10

@LowBar no I really don't think the point is 'why don't I earn as much cash as my well paid briefer' but 'why did my father choose to help my brothers child who wouldn't have struggled financially and not mine, who may well do'

Because hers didn't exist and she specifically told them it would not be happening.

Her niece was a real life existing person whom he loves and wanted to help.

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