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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to accept my parents' £1m+ gift when my sister gets nothing

776 replies

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 21:00

My parents have recently told me they want to gift me assets worth just over £1m while they're still alive. It's a mixture of investments, funds and cash.

The problem is they don't intend to give my sister anything.

My sister is absolutely furious and says I should refuse the money unless they split everything equally between us.
For context, we had a very happy childhood. Our parents were loving, supportive and provided us with every opportunity. There was no obvious favouritism.

As adults, however, our relationships with them have been very different. I see them every week, help them with shopping, appointments, paperwork and generally make sure they're OK. They're in their late 70s and increasingly need support.

My sister has never really made much effort. She can go months without seeing them. A recent example was when they needed a lift to the airport. She was free and lived closest but simply couldn't be bothered. Another relative ended up taking them.

My parents are very hurt by this and have told me repeatedly that their decision is based on years of feeling ignored by her.
The thing is, I don't actually feel responsible for their decision. It's their money. They're mentally capable, fully understand what they're doing and have made their views clear.

My sister says that may be true, but by accepting the money I'm endorsing their behaviour and choosing money over my relationship with her.

My response was that turning down £1m doesn't magically mean she gets it. It simply means none of us do.

She says a decent sister would refuse it on principle.

DH thinks that's easy to say when she's asking me to sacrifice something that could transform our children's futures.

So AIBU for thinking this isn't my decision to make, and that refusing the money out of "solidarity" would be completely irrational and stupid.

I care for my sister but she has thrown away her life by herself. We came from very good backgrounds with potential, she chose to waste that. I am now in my 40s, I live a very modest life, DH is an engineer, I work for civil service I’ve been in the civil service for almost 20 years so I have worked my way up. I am not a luxury type of person, DH and I share a car, it’s over 10 years old we bought it brand new XC90 it does the job very well, our children are at private school but it’s not eton it’s very affordable and does the job too. They’re doing very well at school, we go on 3 holidays a year, we invest for them each year we save from them a certain amount tax free and my parents top that for them. They do the same for my sisters children. My sister has no bothered to do anything for her children. All the savings they have is from our parents which is quite sad. What kind of parent has children when they can’t save for their futures. She has a new car all the time, lives wayy above her means yet nothing to show for it just new things all the time. Conspicuous consumption. She is pushing 50 and has wasted her potential now wants to cry to me. We are both oxbridge educated, went to very good private schools, the world was our oyster.

OP posts:
randomnamegenerated · 23/06/2026 22:06

I have to say, your written English is very surprising for an Oxbridge degree holder, even one with dyslexia...

On the very, very outside chance this is real, why don't your parents bypass both of you and divide it equally between your children? If they're willing to penalise their grandchildren due to their relationship with her, they're garbage people.

PrettyPickle · 23/06/2026 22:09

Why are people getting at the OP? Its not her in action that has led to her parents decision to leave her sister out.

She has explained the background and finances with all parties to explain the decision they have come to, not her. The parents have made the decision NOT her.

But I would like to know, apologies if I have missed this, how the sister knows this? Who told her and under what circumstances?

noworklifebalance · 23/06/2026 22:09

slapmyarseandcallmemary · 23/06/2026 21:11

"what kind of parent has children when they can't save for their futures".
I was in agreement with you til you said this. And it is such a judgemental thing to say. Esp in this day and age when some people can barely feed their kids never mind save for them.

Tbf to OP she said her sister does have the money to save for them but chooses to spend it on stuff rather than secure her children’s future - presumably assuming that she will inherit and be ok, whilst not making and effort to see parents who seemingly gave them a happy childhood.

Violinorbanjo · 23/06/2026 22:09

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 22:04

My children do not have to do anything. As long as they’re decent people I will be proud there is no pressure at all. I would like for them to get decent GCSEs & Alevels or whatever level 3 education they’d like to take part in. It’s not bad parenting for us to want them to have forms of qualification. My eldest son currently wants to be a train driver and if that’s what he ends up doing as long as he’s happy we will be happy too.

There is no pressure at all we just want them to have fun and also be happy. Having qualifications isn’t pressure after GCSEs they can pick whatever they want to do and we will support them.

A total change of tone, values and basic foundation to you portrayed yourself to be in the opening postings.

thanks lady, my mark is about F to your efforts

HaveYouFedTheFish · 23/06/2026 22:10

PenelopeJoanSterling · 23/06/2026 22:02

well one is letters, the other is numbers and symbols completely different subjects

or would you say the same to Einstein ?

It's an urban legend that Einstein was dyslexic - it's highly unlikely he was. Are you aware of all the articles and book chapters he wrote himself, in both German and English?

noworklifebalance · 23/06/2026 22:11

It doesn’t sound like they have had much of relationship with the sister’s children. Perhaps they want to help OP and her husband and not bypass them.

Yetanotherone12 · 23/06/2026 22:11

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 21:58

They have been making changes to their will as my dad was ill and wanted to make plans. She overheard a conversation and one thing led to another so they told her she will not get anything from them. I think they’re just hurt that she can go months without seeing them and mainly only sees them if she needs something. It’s not as thought they have completely cut her out, she needed some money recently and they gave it to her.

Do they make the effort to see her? Or is she expected to run around after them? Perhaps with her being such a loser and not even being able to manage a “modest” lifestyle such as your own she can’t afford to focus on anything but her own needs.

making money conditional on how much she sees them is wrong, imo.

you sound like Dh’s sister. She does “everything” for their parents, and is very involved in their lives. Reality is very different, she’s had a lot of monetary support from them so she’s been able to stay in her expensive house, send her kids to private school etc. as the youngest, they’d overstretched when it came to dh and his kids so they got nothing. We had to move away to afford a house, so saw them less- had much younger kids that they couldn’t babysit or help with as they were already committed to sil’s kids. So she convinced them dh “wasn’t interested” and got them to give her a substantial gift, which she was going to use to help care for them when they were older. She didn’t.

otoh both me and my brother moved away for work. We don’t see our mum as much as our sister, but all money gifts are given equally.

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 22:11

TinyGingerCat · 23/06/2026 22:04

This is rage bait. Someone with an Oxford maths degree would not have to work their way up in the CS. What grade did you start at OP? If you didn’t get on the fast stream with your apparently stellar education then you’ve wasted what you were given. Also CS salaries are not high enough even at SCS level to afford two kids at private school however modest and three holidays a year and huge savings for the kids.

I did work my way up? I joined the GORS after working in America straight after undergrad. This is why I said we live a modest life our salaries aren’t high at all.
Dh does work as well in the private sector. His salary and my salary combined we are able to send our children to private school it’s not an academic school and certainly not eton level. A lot of the parents at this school are in the CS too or gps there’s a lot of scientists too.

OP posts:
cupofteacupofteaalmostgotshaggedcupoftea · 23/06/2026 22:11

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 21:55

I am not superior than her. She was smarter than me which is why it was such a shame to see her potential get wasted.

Your potential was also wasted. Yet you are judging her. I assume it must be your husband paying for your “modest” luxury existence, so stop looking down your nose at your sister’s life as a means of dismissing her feelings on the matter of this windfall.

Oliveoy · 23/06/2026 22:12

PenelopeJoanSterling · 23/06/2026 22:02

well one is letters, the other is numbers and symbols completely different subjects

or would you say the same to Einstein ?

That's rather reductionist. A Maths degree at Oxbridge would require a huge amount of working memory, language processing and sequencing, all of which would be a considerable challenge to somebody with dyslexia.

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 22:12

noworklifebalance · 23/06/2026 22:09

Tbf to OP she said her sister does have the money to save for them but chooses to spend it on stuff rather than secure her children’s future - presumably assuming that she will inherit and be ok, whilst not making and effort to see parents who seemingly gave them a happy childhood.

Thank you!

I will admit my take was not the best. My sister is not suffering she has money, she’s always had money but has always spent it on very expensive things that’s was more what I was trying to convey. She chose not to save for them when she could.

OP posts:
PenelopeJoanSterling · 23/06/2026 22:13

HaveYouFedTheFish · 23/06/2026 22:10

It's an urban legend that Einstein was dyslexic - it's highly unlikely he was. Are you aware of all the articles and book chapters he wrote himself, in both German and English?

in the spirit of Oxbridge id need a list of all your academic sources, book titles authors and also written my proper academics rather than joe blogs the conspaircy person etc to backup what your saying without those your points could also be urban myths

SleepingStandingUp · 23/06/2026 22:13

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 21:07

I thought about that. But she doesn’t deserve it. There’s been moments where they have needed her and she has refused. There’s been moments where DH and I have made sacrifices to make sure my parents are okay, they’re elderly it’s not easy. It would have been nice to share that with my sister but nope no where to be reached.

I do not feel like I deserve it to. End of the day it’s my parents money they’ve worked so hard they have invested their money very well and gave us a great life. All we had to do was seize opportunities but my sister chose not to. That’s all they ever asked of us is to take every opportunity we can.

So your sister doesn't deserve £1m+ because she's a shitty daughter or because she made different life choices and took different opportunities to you?

What is this awful lifestyle she's chosen that you've had to criticise out of love for her? In what ways has she ruined her life and thrown away all your parents opportunities?

PenelopeJoanSterling · 23/06/2026 22:15

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 22:11

I did work my way up? I joined the GORS after working in America straight after undergrad. This is why I said we live a modest life our salaries aren’t high at all.
Dh does work as well in the private sector. His salary and my salary combined we are able to send our children to private school it’s not an academic school and certainly not eton level. A lot of the parents at this school are in the CS too or gps there’s a lot of scientists too.

the problem is your trying to debate with the average joe on here, you may as well be pissing in the wind so to speak, as yes some people you may have a proper debate.

PurpleLovecats · 23/06/2026 22:16

SleepingStandingUp · 23/06/2026 22:13

So your sister doesn't deserve £1m+ because she's a shitty daughter or because she made different life choices and took different opportunities to you?

What is this awful lifestyle she's chosen that you've had to criticise out of love for her? In what ways has she ruined her life and thrown away all your parents opportunities?

She hasn’t. I’ve asked several times about this and OP has ignored me. She’s clearly actually doing perfectly well but OP wants to downplay it to justify her million.

TinyGingerCat · 23/06/2026 22:17

PenelopeJoanSterling · 23/06/2026 22:06

they could be Intelligence services for all we know as its still civil service even gchq etc

She could be but the grades don’t pay more - I work for a large dept that is one of the higher paying. Unless the OP is a DG or the perm sec she’s not raking it in. Private business pays far better than the CS.

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 22:17

Yetanotherone12 · 23/06/2026 22:11

Do they make the effort to see her? Or is she expected to run around after them? Perhaps with her being such a loser and not even being able to manage a “modest” lifestyle such as your own she can’t afford to focus on anything but her own needs.

making money conditional on how much she sees them is wrong, imo.

you sound like Dh’s sister. She does “everything” for their parents, and is very involved in their lives. Reality is very different, she’s had a lot of monetary support from them so she’s been able to stay in her expensive house, send her kids to private school etc. as the youngest, they’d overstretched when it came to dh and his kids so they got nothing. We had to move away to afford a house, so saw them less- had much younger kids that they couldn’t babysit or help with as they were already committed to sil’s kids. So she convinced them dh “wasn’t interested” and got them to give her a substantial gift, which she was going to use to help care for them when they were older. She didn’t.

otoh both me and my brother moved away for work. We don’t see our mum as much as our sister, but all money gifts are given equally.

Money isn’t conditional on how much we see them. It’s just they have tried. They’ve tried to see her, they are always asking to go see her she often says she’s busy. They don’t expect her to come see them my father is still driving and has asked multiple times if he can drive them to go see her but she doesn’t want to or always has something planned. She misses birthdays etc. I live close so it’s been easier for me to see them. They call she doesn’t answer, most of the calls have been when she needs something never really just to say hey how are you etc. My father was quite ill recently she did not even come to see him, her children did, they’re university age, they made the journey to come see their grandparents soon as they heard he was in hospital. It’s little things like that. It’s built up over the years I suppose it’s resentment and my parents at this stage in their lives have nothing to lose. It’s a shame I have tried to speak to them they do not want to reconsider.

OP posts:
HaveYouFedTheFish · 23/06/2026 22:17

PenelopeJoanSterling · 23/06/2026 22:13

in the spirit of Oxbridge id need a list of all your academic sources, book titles authors and also written my proper academics rather than joe blogs the conspaircy person etc to backup what your saying without those your points could also be urban myths

They could, but you can do your own research (if you do, then you'll see that I'm right) as this is a social media forum, not an academic setting. I'm going to bed.

arminius · 23/06/2026 22:18

You sound insufferable! So full of yourself. I wonder if your sister avoids the family not because she can’t be bothered but because of the attitude!

Ezzee · 23/06/2026 22:18

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 21:58

They have been making changes to their will as my dad was ill and wanted to make plans. She overheard a conversation and one thing led to another so they told her she will not get anything from them. I think they’re just hurt that she can go months without seeing them and mainly only sees them if she needs something. It’s not as thought they have completely cut her out, she needed some money recently and they gave it to her.

If she doesn't visit how did she overhear them...
You and your parents sound judgemental and frankly awful, because she didn't go in the direction you all feel she should, you have her cut out, you also enable this!
I doubt very much if your sister replied she would say you had a loving, happy, equal and supportive childhood, I bet you were the favorite ( you would know but ignore).
You can protest as much as you like OP but it doesn't take a degree to see what sort of people you are.
Also of course you wouldn't do this to YOUR children but you are happy and complicit to let your parents do this to your sibling, shame on you!

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 22:18

PurpleLovecats · 23/06/2026 22:16

She hasn’t. I’ve asked several times about this and OP has ignored me. She’s clearly actually doing perfectly well but OP wants to downplay it to justify her million.

I am not ignoring anyone. I might have missed a few responses but not on purpose

OP posts:
Oliveoy · 23/06/2026 22:19

PenelopeJoanSterling · 23/06/2026 22:15

the problem is your trying to debate with the average joe on here, you may as well be pissing in the wind so to speak, as yes some people you may have a proper debate.

Are you an Oxbridge graduate too?.

Metromayhem · 23/06/2026 22:19

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 22:18

I am not ignoring anyone. I might have missed a few responses but not on purpose

You seem to be cherrypicking responses that may paint you in a more favourable light.

PenelopeJoanSterling · 23/06/2026 22:20

HaveYouFedTheFish · 23/06/2026 22:17

They could, but you can do your own research (if you do, then you'll see that I'm right) as this is a social media forum, not an academic setting. I'm going to bed.

have a good zzzz , why do people always say do your own research what happened to defending your points ,

Merryoldgoat · 23/06/2026 22:20

ForEagerRobin · 23/06/2026 22:11

I did work my way up? I joined the GORS after working in America straight after undergrad. This is why I said we live a modest life our salaries aren’t high at all.
Dh does work as well in the private sector. His salary and my salary combined we are able to send our children to private school it’s not an academic school and certainly not eton level. A lot of the parents at this school are in the CS too or gps there’s a lot of scientists too.

This is another beloved sound bite: ‘it’s not Eton’

Well no. Very few are. In fact only one is. It’s just a distancing technique.

Even at a very ‘affordable’ private school tuition would be £30k ish a year for two children - around £60k earned income is needed to realise £30k net - nearly twice the median UK income.

This is all bollocks.

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