Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think that a gift isn’t really a gift if it’s being a carer on holiday?

210 replies

AmazonDiamond · 24/01/2026 19:34

My mother is quite wealthy and is 89. She’s in pretty good health on the whole but she’s got mobility and cognition (not dementia but age related decline) issues. Her financial adviser has recommended that to avoid 40% inheritance tax on her assets as much as possible, she should gift £6k a year (the limits to avoid the 7 year inheritance tax rule is £3k plus another £3k if it’s interest earned on investment and you can prove you don’t need it to live on). She has excellent pensions which give her an income far in excess of what she needs or wants to spend, 4 children and numerous grandchildren. So she could give away £6k a year no problem.

Instead of giving her children the money (and of course she doesn’t need to give it to us - she can give it to a charity or anywhere!) she says that she wants to use the money to pay for us to take her away on holidays. So her gift is us taking her away on holiday. Not all together but each of us taking her away in turn.

I work full time, have three kids (two with SEN) and a limited holiday allowance. AIBU in thinking this isn’t really a gift and is actually working?

For context, I do most of the day to day caring as she moved to be very close to me after my dad died 6 years ago.

She keeps badgering me about where I want to go. I do love her very much but this wouldn’t be a holiday. I don’t know how to say to her that I don’t want to take her on holiday without really hurting her feelings. I’ve suggested a series of day trips but she keeps pushing back with that not being very relaxing for me. She really has no idea that she is not at all relaxing to be with.

If anyone has any good ideas how I could say thanks but no thanks I would love to hear it. And I don’t want her money at all.

OP posts:
rookiemere · 26/01/2026 11:52

Naunet · 26/01/2026 10:37

Wow, I guess you just tell her you want the money, not to enjoy experiences spending time with her. And by the way, it would be her taking you on holiday, not the other way around.

The OP has already explained why she would not be able to enjoy any aspects of the trip as all her time would be spent making sure her DM was ok in unfamiliar surroundings. Oh and as DM is not able to travel independently and is presumably picking the destination and accommodation, I wouldn’t really call it a holiday for OP. It’s caring for a frail elderly person in different places where many more things could go wrong and OP will be expected to sort them all out.

VickyEadieofThigh · 26/01/2026 11:56

TFImBackIn · 24/01/2026 19:47

But she could take you on the holiday AND give you the money! There's nothing to say she can't buy a holiday for a member of her family.

You're going to have to put your foot down on this one, OP. You've got too much on and too little time.

THIS!

Boomer55 · 26/01/2026 12:11

DeftGoldHedgehog · 25/01/2026 08:38

If you don't like your mum and can't get anyone to look after the kids then the answer is different, but personally as someone who works FT with two kids (one SEN) I went away with my mum for a short break every year for the last few years of her life. Yes, it was a holiday more focused around my DM's mobility limitations, especially in the final couple of years before she died, but we got on well and had some nice quality time together.

Yeah, my DD asked me to go away with her for a week. Shortly after I lost my DH. I paid.

To a place we have been many times before. I have got mobility issues, but don't need a carer, so we worked it out between us.

She wanted to go beach horse riding daily, which I can't now, so I stayed in the lodge. Reading etc. - all good.

Lunchtime - we went for a lovely pub lunch. Arranged to use the spa/facials etc in the afternoon.

Then on the way back, we picked up some bits for the evening, and after the spa, and spent the rest of the day chilling on the lodge decking, with a few glasses of wine.

She'd had a break from work, kids etc and we both relaxed. Luckily, we had glorious weather 🌞

It can work. 👍

rookiemere · 26/01/2026 12:29

@Boomer55 with respect I am guessing you are a lot younger than OPs DM, I suspect your user name is a clue to that Smile.

Your trip sounds lovely, but something I have observed with my own very elderly DPs from the age of about 80 onwards, it seemed literally impossible for them to understand that when working time is precious and I don’t want to do the same things they do. I don’t want to make generalisations about elderly people so let’s just say this has been a common experience amongst my friends and their DPs as well.

I think OP knows her own DM and her abilities better than we do, and if she says it will be a chore not a holiday, I’m inclined to believe her.

Mary46 · 26/01/2026 12:37

Op tricky. Mine would be no break so we never got into it. Is it set in stone yearly then.. mine likes her own way and food at set times. Mine is a rest not take on minding. Siblings feel same about it

FluffyBenji23 · 26/01/2026 16:32

Absolutely do not do this! I have a relative with a LD and thought it'd be fun to go on a family holiday. Went with my daughter, son in law and two year old grandchild. It was not fun. It was a disaster! Their needs were so different that it was impossible to find things we all enjoyed. I ended up being the carer and had no break at all.

Littlemisssavvy · 26/01/2026 16:41

YANBU….. however could you do 3 days just you and your DM at a lovely health Spa so you get a break and some down time but its not too much time away from work/kids?

I took my mum here www.stobocastle.co.uk, worked really well as she could have treatments and we had dinner together but we both had individual time relaxing. This might be too far depending on when you live but there loads of nice inches around the UK.

www.stobocastle.co.uk/

AmazonDiamond · 26/01/2026 19:27

Thank you for all the messages. I’ve actually now found a really lovely hotel where we can do day trips to (much more interesting) castles and stately homes than the boring ones I’ve been forcing her to visit for the last two years (😅) and I can also go for lovely hikes some of the time which is my perfect down time. And we can go for 2-3 nights which will work for me and hopefully the luxury will also work for her. I can eat up her £1500 budget very fast 🤣

OP posts:
BruFord · 26/01/2026 19:33

That sounds ideal @AmazonDiamond!

Pinkcheerios · 26/01/2026 19:37

AmazonDiamond · 26/01/2026 19:27

Thank you for all the messages. I’ve actually now found a really lovely hotel where we can do day trips to (much more interesting) castles and stately homes than the boring ones I’ve been forcing her to visit for the last two years (😅) and I can also go for lovely hikes some of the time which is my perfect down time. And we can go for 2-3 nights which will work for me and hopefully the luxury will also work for her. I can eat up her £1500 budget very fast 🤣

Sounds lovely
but…

what’s your mother’s response?!

New posts on this thread. Refresh page