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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel uncomfortable about my in laws offering a huge house deposit?

356 replies

ThatZippyWasp · 15/03/2026 13:55

Husband 39 and I 39 are we are expecting our third baby later this summer. Our eldest is 3 and our second has just turned 1 so it is going to be busy but we are really excited to meet our baby.

We have recently announced to our families about the pregnancy and everyone seems happy for us. However my in laws have immediately started again about our housing situation.

For context, we bought a house 9 years ago. It was a 3 bed in SW London. We sold it in 2022 when we decided we wanted to start a family and change our priorities a bit. Since then we have been renting. I know renting is not ideal or particularly secure but it has worked for us for the time being while we figured out what we wanted long term.

We do have savings and we already have around a 30 percent deposit for an average 5 bed in SW or SE London. We have been actively looking and keeping an eye on the market. We would ideally like to stay in SW London but we have also seen some lovely houses in Dulwich so we are open to SE London as well.

The difficulty is that we are going to be a family of five so realistically we need a 5 or possibly even 6 bedroom house. As you can imagine those are not cheap in London. We have also considered moving further out into Surrey but we both work in London and need to be in the office twice a week so we cannot go too far out.

My in laws keep saying we need more stability for the children and they have now offered to help financially. Their suggestion is that they would contribute a large amount towards the deposit, roughly 50 percent. Between that and our savings we would obviously be able to buy somewhere much sooner and with far less pressure.

On paper it sounds incredibly generous and I do realise many people would jump at the offer. But I cannot help feeling uncomfortable about it. I worry that we would end up feeling like we owe them something or that it might blur boundaries later on or if there’s a breakdown of our marriage. We’ve been together since we were 19 at university.

My husband thinks I am massively overthinking and says they are just trying to help us and want their grandchildren to have a secure home. He says we would be silly to turn it down given how expensive London is. I think we are capable of buying our own place ourselves we’ve saved up enough for 30% deposit could probably add another 5% each to that. I don’t want his parents to later on say to us you have the house because of us or you have this because of us etc. They’re lovely in laws and I’m grateful but I also think boundaries are important once we start blurring it would mean they would get a say in a lot of aspects of my children’s lives which isn’t what I’m comfortable with.

DH and I have spoke and he’s said it’s my call he understands where I’m coming from. I feel bad saying no as it is a privilege but I just don’t want to feel as though I owe them something in return. Maybe I’m over thinking it and I’ve watched too many exaggerated tv dramas.

OP posts:
BeingATwatItsABingThing · 15/03/2026 16:37

I am in a very similar situation in that PIL are about to give DH and I a chunk of money from their house sale. A major chunk of money. We already own our house but it’s a 3-bed and we have 3 children.

I am very grateful for the money. It means we will be able to afford to give our kids a good home and hopefully not have to move again until DH and I look to downsize. PIL have given us money in the past for other things and there have been no strings attached.

I would graciously accept their offer.

Notellinganyone · 15/03/2026 16:37

BettyBoh · 15/03/2026 14:42

You definitely sound very uncomfortable about it. So you feel better about it all, they can give the money to me. They get what they want: to make sure a family of 5 is stable. You get what you want: not having to be stupidly dramatic about receiving some money now.
what you won’t get, and what your children won’t get is your husbands/ their grandparents inheritance.

do you realise how stupid you sound moaning about this?

Rude and unreasonable. OP is entitled to her concerns and given the context with the other siblings I would refuse this. I’d buy something a bit smaller - Dulwich is a great place to live btw.

dastardlydani · 15/03/2026 16:41

Surely this will be a significant amount of money?

I don’t see how they can give you hundreds of thousands but nothing to other siblings.

brightbevs · 15/03/2026 16:41

Perhaps they have plans to help the other siblings similarly. My parents helped us all but at different times.

BeingATwatItsABingThing · 15/03/2026 16:42

ThatZippyWasp · 15/03/2026 14:24

A bit more context

DH is the youngest of 4
PIL never offered to help any of the other children with deposits or anything. My sister in law and her husband were renting for a long time, PIL did not offer to help them. They have the money to.
DH knows he’s the favourite
DHs siblings might be upset they’re all the house ladder now but I think it would still hurt because their parents have always had money but never offered to help the others.

See, this is where our situations differ. My PIL offer support to all four of their children. The money we are about to get is a total amount split four ways between all of their children.

This will likely cause major resentment.

Twoshoesnewshoes · 15/03/2026 16:42

I think you are right to listen to your instinct here @ThatZippyWasp
DHs parents gave his younger brother a massive deposit towards his house, because he had farted around on a five year gap year and come back with a girlfriend and her child.
they didn’t give any to DH and his older brother. It has caused a lot of difficulties over the years.
my DM always give me and DSis exactly the same - my DSis needed a new car urgently recently and my mum helped her out. I didn’t want the money so she put it in my kids savings account.
being unequal is so dodgy, they must know that it’s not fair, which would make me question their motives, conscious or not.

MangoesIntoAPube · 15/03/2026 16:43

Ireallycantthinkofagoodone · 15/03/2026 16:35

Beside the point, but why on earth did you sell your previous house and start renting? I can’t see any advantage of selling your home, (and wasting money paying someone else’s mortgage), unless it’s to buy another.

https://housemetric.co.uk/analysis/region/London

No idea why OP did it but they sold at the peak- house prices in London are significantly down in real terms since 2022 so probably a good move whatever the reason.

London House Prices & Property Market Analysis

House prices in London fell -1.3% in the last year, -4.4% after inflation. Granular property market analysis of trends with maps & charts from March 2026.

https://housemetric.co.uk/analysis/region/London

Gazelda · 15/03/2026 16:48

my First husband and I had a loan from his parents to help us buy our first home.

his 3 siblings didn’t get the same generosity.

It felt like they had a stake in our relationship. It was a factor in how we planned starting a family, where we holidayed, whether we got a new car etc.

in the end, my marriage ended and the gift turned into a loan which I had to repay 50% of.

I was young and naive and regretted it hugely.

OntheOtherFlipper · 15/03/2026 16:49

MerryUmberHedgehog · 15/03/2026 15:07

Im sorry but are you any good at maths? 1 bedroom each (lucky them. I had to share till I was 16 and my own kids had to share for a few years too). Plus 1 bedroom for you = 4.
Realistically 5 or 6 bedrooms? You sound a tad entitled to me without any understanding of the real world. Accept the loan or buy a smaller house. Who cares. Youre lucky thats all you have to worry about.

You’re calling her entitled for not accepting the money? I think maybe you just like calling people entitled.

Talkingtomyhouseplants · 15/03/2026 16:54

YABU because a family of 5 needs a 4 bedroom house not 5 or 6.

YA also BU to look a gift horse in the mouth. There’s no prizes for doing things without help you know.

Badgerstmary · 15/03/2026 16:54

Before the drip feed I thought definitely take the money. Now, knowing that dp’s sibling were not offered financial help, I too would feel very uncomfortable accepting it.

CeciliaMars · 15/03/2026 16:55

Why do you need a 5 or 6 bedroom house for 5 people? We are a family of 5 and feel lucky to have a 4-bed - the kids all have their own rooms.

BettyBoh · 15/03/2026 16:56

Notellinganyone · 15/03/2026 16:37

Rude and unreasonable. OP is entitled to her concerns and given the context with the other siblings I would refuse this. I’d buy something a bit smaller - Dulwich is a great place to live btw.

I didn’t read the bit about other siblings. Only the main post. To add that bit in so late, yet it be “central” to the discomfort, I am thinking the OP has made this up.

ArtAngel · 15/03/2026 17:01

OP, I think that one way and another you need to be realistic and buy a house you can afford and stop throwing your money away on rent.

6 bedrooms in Dulwich sounds fabulous but your dreams and aspirations are holding you back from going ahead and buying security at a price you can afford.

Is your eldest in school yet?

Panicmode1 · 15/03/2026 17:04

My parents gifted DH and I a very large sum this year for various reasons BUT they offered the same to my brother. He doesn't need the money but my parents have redrafted their will so that this gift is reflected in the apportionment.

As the mother of four, I would be very wary of creating imbalance with the siblings..is your DH close to them? I would have been devastated if my parents had given my brother a large sum and not me. I can see why it's tempting but I would be very careful of the consequences if you do.

4wardlooking · 15/03/2026 17:04

ThatZippyWasp · 15/03/2026 14:24

A bit more context

DH is the youngest of 4
PIL never offered to help any of the other children with deposits or anything. My sister in law and her husband were renting for a long time, PIL did not offer to help them. They have the money to.
DH knows he’s the favourite
DHs siblings might be upset they’re all the house ladder now but I think it would still hurt because their parents have always had money but never offered to help the others.

Purely because of this. AVOID, AVOID, AVOID.

I am an adult child who has been treated unfairly financially and it does cause massive rifts, its unforgiveable of parents to do this to their children that they are supposed to love and care for equally.

Stay well clear of this offer.

Blondeshavemorefun · 15/03/2026 17:06

ThatZippyWasp · 15/03/2026 16:02

Maybe it’s been a waste but we haven’t felt that it’s been a waste. We have been very happy to rent for the last 4 years, it’s been the perfect house for us and we’d have loved to buy it but LL isn’t wanting to sell it as of yet.

We would like to have a spare room I don’t see any issue with that if we can afford it ? Please let me know what the issue is with a spare room.

You want 2 possibly

you said 5/6 bedrooms

you can’t afford 5 without help is what you post is coming across

or can you ?

SalmonOnFinnCrisp · 15/03/2026 17:07

If you led with the drip feed the poll voting would be very different

Having read all your posts, your concerns are well founded imo.

It depends on how close ypu are to the siblings / how close you'd like the cousins to be... based on my own values....

I would tell your dh you are happy to accept any amount as long as his siblings receive the same you would feel v uncomfortable otherwise. That puts it back in their court amd shines a light on their (kinda awful) favouritism

Separately we are in a 5 bed with 2 kids and i can totally understand why you want one or 2 spare bedrooms

BareGrylls · 15/03/2026 17:09

If be gutted if I offered my DS a helping hand financially and he didn't feel able to take it because his partner objected.
The time to pass money on to your offspring is when they need it which is usually before you are dead.

I get that the other siblings haven't had any but have you actually discussed it with the PILs? Let them know you feel uncomfortable being treated differently?

Blondeshavemorefun · 15/03/2026 17:14

As in you say you have 30% deposit for a 5 bed. Then say 5 beds are costly in London. Which they are - anything is in London or south east

would you feel better if the in-laws have all 4 siblings the same amount

would dh siblings be pissed off /jealous with him /you getting help and them nothing

are you saying thy would give 50% of deposit so 15% on top of what you have If you have 30%

if you can do it alone then maybe do and they can put money into kids isas for when they want to buy a home

how many grandchildren do they have ?

DirtyBird · 15/03/2026 17:20

I would accept it only if DH agreed to split it with his siblings. What horrible parents. My parents favored my sister and it has sadly affected me my whole life.

firstofallimadelight · 15/03/2026 17:23

I’d let dh decide but I’d suggest he mentions to parents that they should gift equally to each sibling

Theamaryllis · 15/03/2026 17:26

ThatZippyWasp · 15/03/2026 14:24

A bit more context

DH is the youngest of 4
PIL never offered to help any of the other children with deposits or anything. My sister in law and her husband were renting for a long time, PIL did not offer to help them. They have the money to.
DH knows he’s the favourite
DHs siblings might be upset they’re all the house ladder now but I think it would still hurt because their parents have always had money but never offered to help the others.

So you need to have a very open and upfront conversation with his parents:

  1. is this equitable with other siblings Mum and Dad? How can we make it fair?
  2. is it a gift? In which case can we have a signed agreement that is a gift completely with no strings attached
  3. is it a gift to DH? Eg in case of divorce he gets that out of the house first it is split
  4. is this inheritance early? Look at tax rules for ‘giving away money’ if they are not retired and in good health this should not be a problem
  5. what happens if your finances change mum and dad? As a gift needs to be a gift not until I want to go on a cruise etc
  6. do they want to possibly be housed by you in the future or expect care ? - again I would have this conversation

I rented for a long time and I could not afford to buy. My DH put in all of the money. In your case it makes 100% sense to buy as long as it is fine with other siblings, transparent and no expectation of anything in return. But with any strings it’s a no.

Have those difficult conversations.

If it helps (at all) we are going to help all of ours buy. It is 100% gift and it is with no expectation of anything in return. We will solely gift the same amount to each child.

MJagain · 15/03/2026 17:27

CeciliaMars · 15/03/2026 16:55

Why do you need a 5 or 6 bedroom house for 5 people? We are a family of 5 and feel lucky to have a 4-bed - the kids all have their own rooms.

They talk about communing int London 2 days per week. That, combined with the savings etc, indicates to me that they have the kind of jobs where a WFH office is needed / expected

SerafinasGoose · 15/03/2026 17:28

BareGrylls · 15/03/2026 17:09

If be gutted if I offered my DS a helping hand financially and he didn't feel able to take it because his partner objected.
The time to pass money on to your offspring is when they need it which is usually before you are dead.

I get that the other siblings haven't had any but have you actually discussed it with the PILs? Let them know you feel uncomfortable being treated differently?

That's unfortunate, but not everyone is comfortable with taking large sums of money from anyone else. I'd be loath to do this from my own parents, let alone anyone else's.

A partner's first priority is with their primary family unit. In a situation where major life decisions are made on an equal basis both partners need to be happy if these are to happen.

What our parents might want for us is not necessarily the deciding factor.

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