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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Birthday present - single “supplement”?

129 replies

KewTitles · 10/04/2025 11:10

My cousin is turning 60 soon and is hosting a big family party. Unfortunately I can’t attend as I’m on holiday.

As I won’t be there, my mum asked if I’d like to contribute to a present along with her and my dad, my brother and SIL. The plan is to get Amazon vouchers rather than a physical present, so there’s no set amount involved. My mum asked if I was happy to give £20, which l said was fine. She then said, “That works out nicely, doesn’t it? £60 for a 60th birthday.”

I said she’d added up wrong - £20 each would be £100. She seemed confused and said, “No, it’s definitely £60 - £20 from you, £20 from me and your dad and £20 from your brother and SIL”. Basically she’s not treating us as five people for the purposes of the split, but three units; two couples and me. So I pay twice as much.

I said I didn’t think this was very fair. My mum said, “Well, of course you don’t have to give £20 - I just thought it made a nice number.” I said I understood the idea, but that wasn’t the point; the point was I as one person was expected to contribute the same amount as a couple.

AIBU? On one hand, as I’m perfectly happy to give £20 and would have definitely spent that or more on a physical present, maybe I shouldn’t worry about what anyone else is giving. But it’s the principle of the thing - the fact that I’m expected to give the same on my own as two adults (and it’s my own family expecting it!) Also if we’re giving £60 between five of us, TBH I think it looks a bit stingy; plus it looks like I only spent £12, when actually the rest of my immediate family spent less than that per person.

Am I entitled to be annoyed by this? And should I just say to my parents and brother that they can put together and I’ll get my cousin something myself?

OP posts:
BallerinaRadio · 10/04/2025 11:11

If you were happy to give £20 then just give the £20, the rest doesn't matter really

JHound · 10/04/2025 11:12

You are correct. They should split the cost between 5. But I am used to the single person’s tax by now! 😫

crockofshite · 10/04/2025 11:14

If each person puts in £12 that adds up to £60

MerryBeret · 10/04/2025 11:14

You are being unreasonable. With your sister in law- just see it as your brother who's chucking in twenty quid as he's the relation. Similarly, it's your mum's sibling's child presumably?

If you're out for a meal etc, of course the single person pays less. Presents? Nah. Eg if I got a joint birthday present for my mum, I'd see it as being from me and my sisters. Totally irrelevant who has partners and who doesn't.

EmpressaurusKitty · 10/04/2025 11:14

Yes, it’s annoying.

I usually buy joint Xmas presents for couples in my family - after all I get joint presents from them!

At the same time, I love having my home to myself so much that some annoyances are worth it. But that’s obviously not going to apply to everyone.

MerryBeret · 10/04/2025 11:15

But yeah, you're free to get your own present if it bothers you that much.

BarnacleBeasley · 10/04/2025 11:17

I don't buy presents for my DP's family. I think this is really £20 from you, £20 from your mum, and £20 from your brother. If it helps, you could think of all the money you are saving not having to buy presents for a hypothetical partner's family?

OatFlatWhiteForMe · 10/04/2025 11:17

YANBU to feel how you feel.

I have to be honest and say I would turn up with the same monetary gift if I was invited to a party by myself, as a couple or as a family. My go to is often a gift voucher for a restaurant the person has mentioned.

As a family for bigger gifts we do per household. Some are couples, some small families and one a family of seven, we have always just stuck to a set amount.

I am very aware of ensuring single friends aren’t disadvantaged in group settings though, I can’t abide couples who think one round covers them both.

TeenLifeMum · 10/04/2025 11:18

The in laws mum non blood relatives would’ve never bought for this relative so it’s really you, your mum and your sibling.

KewTitles · 10/04/2025 11:18

You are being unreasonable. With your sister in law- just see it as your brother who's chucking in twenty quid as he's the relation. Similarly, it's your mum's sibling's child presumably?

Well yes, it is, but my parents have been married for over 50 years! It’s not like I’m expecting a boyfriend of a few months to chip in in his own right.

OP posts:
TeenLifeMum · 10/04/2025 11:18

The in laws mum non blood relatives would’ve never bought for this relative so it’s really you, your mum and your sibling.

ClaredeBear · 10/04/2025 11:20

You said there’s no set amount so give what you would if you were buying a gift for your uncle by yourself.

MerryBeret · 10/04/2025 11:21

KewTitles · 10/04/2025 11:18

You are being unreasonable. With your sister in law- just see it as your brother who's chucking in twenty quid as he's the relation. Similarly, it's your mum's sibling's child presumably?

Well yes, it is, but my parents have been married for over 50 years! It’s not like I’m expecting a boyfriend of a few months to chip in in his own right.

So? I've been married over two decades and it's not my responsibility to buy for DH family and he wouldn't buy for mine.

You're really looking at this the wrong way.

ComtesseDeSpair · 10/04/2025 11:21

I’d just see it as a “per household” thing. And yes, your household is smaller than that of the couples, but you could go down all kinds of muddled roads about whether each household’s contribution should be based on its size, its composition, its income, its outgoings, whatever. A flat contribution is just easier. If you don’t want to give £20 just give £10.

KewTitles · 10/04/2025 11:22

I have to be honest and say I would turn up with the same monetary gift if I was invited to a party by myself, as a couple or as a family.

By “as a family” do you mean you, partner and children, or you and other adult family members?

OP posts:
KewTitles · 10/04/2025 11:24

MerryBeret · 10/04/2025 11:21

So? I've been married over two decades and it's not my responsibility to buy for DH family and he wouldn't buy for mine.

You're really looking at this the wrong way.

It’s not about “responsibility”. No one is being asked to sort a separate present.

When you buy a present for a member of your family, do you put “Love from Merry & Husband” on the tag, or just from Merry?

OP posts:
MellowPinkDeer · 10/04/2025 11:26

I cannot understand why you’re finding an issue with this. It’s £20 , you’re looking for a ‘I’m being discriminated against because I’m single ‘ angle that just doesn’t exist!

Starlight1984 · 10/04/2025 11:52

You're massively overthinking this.

We have a big family and quite often will have a whip round for a wedding / birthday / christening present and it's usually by "family". Which means whether you're single, married, divorced with 10 children and 14 dogs, all siblings chip in the same (so 5 x £20 regardless of marital status or number of kids).

You said you would have spent at least £20 anyway so not sure what the problem is??? Tbh I'm usually just grateful someone else is sorting the present so I don't have to!

MoreDangerousThanAWomanScorned · 10/04/2025 11:59

Surely really you, your mum and your brother are buying a joint present?

ComtesseDeSpair · 10/04/2025 11:59

You’re overthinking it. Your cousin isn’t going to receive £60 and begin breaking it down by the names in the card to conclude that every individual contributed £12.50. He’ll most likely assume that his three blood relatives were the ones who each contributed equally and their spouses’ names were just included in the card because it’s how it is.

On gifts to my family I write “from Comtesse and DH” but we all know that the gift is just as much a surprise to DH when it gets opened as it is to the recipient, and that my money bought it. DH sorts out his own family likewise.

Starlight1984 · 10/04/2025 12:05

ComtesseDeSpair · 10/04/2025 11:59

You’re overthinking it. Your cousin isn’t going to receive £60 and begin breaking it down by the names in the card to conclude that every individual contributed £12.50. He’ll most likely assume that his three blood relatives were the ones who each contributed equally and their spouses’ names were just included in the card because it’s how it is.

On gifts to my family I write “from Comtesse and DH” but we all know that the gift is just as much a surprise to DH when it gets opened as it is to the recipient, and that my money bought it. DH sorts out his own family likewise.

This made me laugh and is so true 😂

Starlight1984 · 10/04/2025 12:06

KewTitles · 10/04/2025 11:24

It’s not about “responsibility”. No one is being asked to sort a separate present.

When you buy a present for a member of your family, do you put “Love from Merry & Husband” on the tag, or just from Merry?

I put "Love from Starlight, DH, DD and Ddogs" but I don't expect the dogs or child to contribute financially either.

AnticleaAndLaertes · 10/04/2025 12:20

I think its a "blood relations" paying the same amount

stclementine · 10/04/2025 12:21

MellowPinkDeer · 10/04/2025 11:26

I cannot understand why you’re finding an issue with this. It’s £20 , you’re looking for a ‘I’m being discriminated against because I’m single ‘ angle that just doesn’t exist!

Trouble is - it does exist and it’s hard when you have less money coming in anyway than a couple. Or if only one person in that couple works, then there is always the option for the other one to earn money if short or lose job or anything. When you’re single you are the only one paying and the only one with the responsibility to pay, not even the emotional support that couples have. The world is set up for couples and families and if you are one person on your own, yes you do get discriminated against in many many little ways every day and it’s tiring.

KewTitles · 10/04/2025 12:23

Starlight1984 · 10/04/2025 12:06

I put "Love from Starlight, DH, DD and Ddogs" but I don't expect the dogs or child to contribute financially either.

You mean almost as if your children and dogs weren’t living-earning adults? 😄

OP posts:
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