Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think it’s my business who gets my money when I die?

180 replies

Trunksarebetter · 21/02/2025 20:05

Not really a big issue I suppose, as ultimately no one else will be able to decide for me (or argue with me when it happens!), but this has annoyed me!

I don’t have children and am very happy for it to stay that way. I was having a general discussion with my parents about retirement plans, as they’re looking to downsize now that they’re retiring. I said I’d probably do similar when I’m older to give myself a lump sum, or maybe do equity release if I decide I don’t want to move. I added that I know a lot of people are against equity release, but that it wouldn’t be the same issue for me, because it’s not as if I have children who will be expecting an inheritance.

My dad said, almost before I’d finished speaking, and in what I felt was a quite causal/dismissive way, “Well, it’ll all go to Lucy”. I said, “Sorry?” and he said, “Your house, your money; it’ll all go to Lucy when you die.”

Lucy is my niece; my brother’s only child. I love her very much and, in all likelihood, I will indeed leave her anything that happens to be left over. But I’m certainly not planning my finances with an inheritance for her in mind. She’ll get everything from her parents, plus whatever my parents leave to my brother - she certainly won’t have to rely on getting anything from me!

I said, fairly jokingly, “Er, hang on - I think that’s up to me! I might not want to leave it all to Lucy!” But my dad seemed to take it quite seriously. He was saying, “Well who else are you going to leave it to? Friends? What’s the point in that when you’re all around the same age anyway? Of course you’ll leave it to Lucy.”

I replied that I’d probably do just that, but a) it would be MY choice and there was no “of course” about it and b) that while she was welcome to anything that was left over, I wasn’t planning for there to be much, because I’m going to spend it, on me.

My dad was a bit huffy about this. He has an awful habit of getting dismissive when a discussion doesn’t go his way, and that’s what I got this time - an “Okay, fine; that’s that”, where he’ll try to shut down the conversation, but then will still throw in a “I just think that…” and goes back to his original point.

I know that it doesn’t realistically matter, as I don’t have to even tell my parents what’s in my will, and unless they outlive me, they’ll never find out. But it’s the assumption that annoys me. What if I wanted to leave the whole lot to charity? Or just plain old didn’t want someone else telling me what was happening to my money? Surely this isn’t for anyone to make assumptions about, family or otherwise?

OP posts:
GeneralPeter · 22/02/2025 13:53

Trunksarebetter · 22/02/2025 07:58

Sorry 😔 I should have stayed in my box like a nice compliant little girl.

No-one on this board has told you to comply.

You do seem to take very badly to others giving you their takes on the situation, if you don’t already agree with them. In which case why create an AIBU?

Leafy74 · 22/02/2025 16:18

daliesque · 22/02/2025 12:14

I have several siblings who seem to think they and their children are entitled to my money when I die. Actually even before I die 🤣

I refuse every demand and have made it clear that I intend spending every penny in having a brilliant old age with my husband.

How do you know how to budget for this unless you know the exact date you will die?

maboardhen · 22/02/2025 18:56

Trunksarebetter · 22/02/2025 09:38

I am the opposite of you. I have been blessed in life and while most of my estate will go to my child I have also made provision for my two nieces.

I’m not sure how this makes you the opposite of me? Unless you’re implying I haven’t been “blessed” because I don’t have children?

Yes I meant as others said. I am going to leave and have started already in giving assets to my brother's children. Therefore I am the opposite of you. I am also leaving a sum to a charity. I think you seem a bit sensitive about this matter as you seem to refer to spinster , childless in an almost joking manner in several posts. It's your choice.

ThatNimblePeer · 22/02/2025 20:35

fitzwilliamdarcy · 22/02/2025 12:19

YANBU. I got cut out of my parents’ will to ensure that their money will all go to the grandkids (I’m infertile). My siblings regularly make comments about how between my parents’ wealth and mine, their kids won’t have any financial worries.

I’ve never discussed with them what I will be doing with my money so they are banking on that assumption.

I’ve seen too many threads on here where parent-posters are aghast at the suggestion that a childless person might want to give some money to something other than their relatives’ kids. You may not get much sympathy here but you are definitely NBU in my book.

I am very sorry your family have behaved that way.

Fountofwisdom · 22/02/2025 20:51

RoWTok · 21/02/2025 21:38

The grabby people are revealing themselves here. Distasteful.

Yep. Specifically, grabby mothers, who think the world owes everything to their precious offspring.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page