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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think Mum should split her estate equally between us?

156 replies

MsFrumble · 01/06/2026 09:27

It’s an inheritance one. I’m in a blended family, mum had two sets of kids with two husbands and now says she is thinking about splitting her estate according to who needs / deserves it most. AIBU to tell her not to do this, and just to make it equal , even though it’s her money

My mum had two kids, (my half brother and sister) with her first husband, then me and my brother with our dad.

My half siblings will likely inherit from their dad and step mum (they couldn’t have more kids) and they will leave a lot through lucky property decisions. Me and my full brother will inherit from our dad, who will leave a moderate amount, through frugality.

Could all change depending on care needs right but this is the staus quo now.

Mum had a conversation with me where she said she wants to divide her estate up according to her own logic rather than split it equally. She wants to leave…

Eldest half brother - a token amount. She feels like he’ll get a load from his dad and also has had his inheritance “from the state”, he lived in council housing for a while, bought cheaply under right to buy and gained a lot when it sold and had a grant to go to uni. He now has a house, and has always worked hard, and has two kids.

Half sister - mum wants to leave her a just under a third. Despite the fact she will inherit half from her dad and step mum (probably loads) mum feels this is cancelled out as she’s had a harder time of it, no uni, doesn’t own a house, or have a stable partner etc. Chose a cool, arty precarious job that means she’s had loads of fun and travel and rubbed shoulders with cool people, but is now ageing out of the profession, and is left with no prospects and no assets. I can see the logic of this, but it was her choice to pick a fun but precarious life and she has had A LOT of fun, if you know what I mean.

My brother - a third. Had to pay fees for uni, prioritised lots of extra study so has prestigious but medium paying job, no wife, kids or property:

Me - a third, I paid the biggest uni fees and have got a good career, but haven’t been able to afford extra study to peruse a more passionate route, as costs went up and loans down. I’ve got two kids, a partner and we own a house. Mum has mumbled about possibly leaving me less as I have a partner, but hasn’t changed her mind about his now we have kids, as they obviously cost a lot.

Obviously mum will do what she wants, but I told her in my view she should just leave her money equally, even though I’d get more if she gave eldest step brother a smaller portion. It’s not fair to penalise elder brother for growing up at a time when the state and circumstances were easier, especially when he has worked hard and half sister, who had the same easier circumstances has lived like the grasshopper who sang all summer, but would still inherit.

I told her if she does this, she will essentially be leaving eldest brother or whichever siblings she decides has already had enough windfalls, with a final act that makes them feel less loved, and that will doubtless completely fuck up our sibling relationships after she is gone.

OP posts:
Ponderingwindow · Yesterday 18:42

Unless there are profound lifetime support needs, doing anything other than splitting the money equally has the potential to cause resentment among the siblings. She should just give equally. Ultimately, it is her decision though. You can’t control what she does.

caringcarer · Yesterday 19:26

Even if you offered to give your eldest brother some of the money you inherit from your Mum it won't take away his hurt or make him feel as loved as his siblings were. I think equal shares is best regardless of situation. Situations can change. I'd have felt really upset if my Mum did not leave me equal shares with my sisters. As it was I was able to treat my sister to a car when hers broke and she needed a car to get to work.

IndigoBrave · Yesterday 19:49

Anjipanji04 · 01/06/2026 13:16

Nothing to do with you. My brother inherited everything from my parents who both died last year. 1.6 million he got, me not a penny.

Surely you can see how this isn’t fair then?

Freeme31 · Yesterday 20:43

Your right she is wrong. Whether it is money or attention the principal is the same it “divides” the siblings. My MIL gave both financial and emotional support to her daughter vastly favouring her. (MIL “felt” my husband had a better job even tho both earned same for both family incomes and she “felt” he coped better. - how she knew i never know as she never asked). My husband never addressed this with her. Before she died she said she was upset they were not close and could “he “ make more effort as “you know what she is like “ - she died and differences were made but now the fallout is he and his sister don’t talk/see each other and it’s really deep rooted in the differences that were made since childhood as well as the financial/emotional inequality into adulthood. The unequal parenting is at fault and just wrong

Pinkissmart · Yesterday 21:12

Ultimately her choice but it is really shitty

Coconutter24 · Yesterday 21:14

BoredZelda · 01/06/2026 09:37

So you give him part of your money, if you feel that strongly about it.

That doesn’t help with the message it sends though does it?

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