• Home
  • You
  • Us
    • Services
    • One Island
  • Insights
    • Investing
    • Pensions & Retirement Planning
    • Financial Planning & Organisation
    • Moving from UK to IOM
    • Scam awareness
  • Podcasts
  • Contact

Call us on 01624 660220

mail@thorntonfs.com
Client login
Thornton Chartered Financial PlannersThornton Chartered Financial Planners
Thornton Chartered Financial PlannersThornton Chartered Financial Planners
  • Home
  • You
  • Us
    • Services
    • One Island
  • Insights
    • Investing
    • Pensions & Retirement Planning
    • Financial Planning & Organisation
    • Moving from UK to IOM
    • Scam awareness
  • Podcasts
  • Contact
4 Things to Consider Before Financially Bailing Out Your Adult Children

4 Things to Consider Before Financially Bailing Out Your Adult Children

13/03/2019 Posted by Sharon Sutton Financial Planning & Organisation

As life expectancy increases, the ‘Baby-Boomer’ generation are finding themselves not only caring for their ageing parents but also their adult children, creating an increased strain on their own retirement plans.

According to a recent study by TD Ameritrade in the USA, 25% of baby boomers are supporting their family members financially (1). Support to adult children averages out to £7,500 per year. That’s £7,500 that boomers aren’t saving, contributing to retirement plans, or investing.

Can your retirement afford that kind of generosity?

If you fall short of your retirement goals, is the adult you’re bailing out going to bail you out during your golden years?

Before you write your struggling young adult another big cheque, ask yourself these four key questions:

What, specifically, is this money for?

The key word here is ‘SPECIFICALLY’.

Many parents tend to err on the side of protecting their child’s feelings when weighing financial support. We know asking for money can be embarrassing, and we don’t want to deepen that embarrassment. Or we’re worried that if we ask too many questions the child will become frustrated and hide serious problems from us going forward.

These are understandable concerns. But it’s also important that you understand whether your child needs support because of something beyond his or her control (a car accident, serious health issues, unexpected job loss) or because they’re struggling with basic adult responsibilities. If your child is making poor budgeting decisions or settling for underemployment, you may be throwing good money after bad.

Be tactful, but get to the root problem before you decide if your hard earned money is the best solution.

What is the real cost to me?

Many parents are already helping their adult children more than they realize.

For example, you might not think much of letting your adult children piggyback on a Sky subscription. After all, it’s only twenty quid a month, right?

But how long have you been giving your child that monthly free pass? Years? You can also set time limits. For example, tell your child they can remain on your car insurance until age 25 or until they get married, whichever comes first.

Are you helping with larger monthly expenses, like student loans or car loan repayments? When will it finally be time to pull the plug?

Our advice: get it all down on paper. Make a spreadsheet that accounts for the financial support you’re already giving your child, large and small. Seeing how even small expenses accumulate over time will be eye-opening for both of you and help inform a good decision.

What are the terms of the bailout?

This is another area that parents tend to tiptoe around because they’re afraid of insulting their children. But do you know of any bank that’s going to loan your kids money indefinitely, charge no interest, and ask for no repayment? Then why should your money be subject to such lousy terms?

Your children have to understand that your generosity is not open-ended, especially as you near retirement age. You’ve probably made many sacrifices for them already. You should not sacrifice your financial security or the nest egg that is meant to support you in retirement.

If your children want you to “be the bank,” then you have every right to act like one. Set clear terms in writing, including a repayment schedule. In more serious cases, you might want to bring us a copy of this agreement so that we can include it in your estate plan.

How else can I help?

It’s very likely that your child spent 16 or more years in school without learning a single thing about managing money. Financial literacy just isn’t taught in schools. This knowledge gap could be a big reason your young adult is struggling.

A BMO Wealth Institute survey found that two-third of parents give money to adult children when a sudden need arises (2). Does your child need money suddenly because he or she doesn’t know how to budget? Help find that balance between covering current expenses and contributing to savings and investment accounts.

Housing and travel expenses can be a shock to recent university graduates. You could help your child negotiate a car lease or loan. You might help a child who’s already chasing after the Joneses by counselling against a rash home purchase that will stretch his or her finances thin.

Introducing your underemployed child to some of your professional connections might lead to a significant career upgrade.

One key connection you should be sure to tap: your fiduciary advisor! We’re always happy to help our clients’ adult children get on their feet. We consider this a service to our clients because we know that the less you’re worried about supporting your children, the more secure your own retirement goals will be.

Share
0

About Sharon Sutton

Having founded Thornton in 2000, Sharon became the island’s first Chartered Financial Planner in 2009 and was UK President of the Personal Finance Society for the year 2017/18 having been first elected to the board in 2012. She was awarded the Chartered Insurance Institute's Award 'Building Public Trust in Life and Pensions in 2019 for her work in leading the PFS Financial Planners Practitioner panel (2017 to 2020).

Contact Us

We're currently offline. Send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Send Message
Finding the balance between today and tomorrow Let's talk
Thornton Associates Logo Transparent
  • Thornton Chartered Financial Planners
  • St. John’s Mill, Isle of Man, IM4 3AF
  • 01624 660220
  • mail@thorntonfs.com

Client login

Registered office: The Elms, Westmead, Glen Vine, Isle of Man. Company number 101131C
Licensed by the Isle of Man Financial Services Authority, number 1283
Thornton Chartered Financial Planners is the registered business name of Thornton Associates Ltd.

Proud member of Isle of Man Chamber of Commerce

Latest News

Taking Control: Death and Financial Planning

Taking Control: Death and Financial Planning

22/03/2023

Last week Martin Lewis dedicated his Money Show Live to what...

The Bank Wobble – Another Financial Crisis?

The Bank Wobble – Another Financial Crisis?

20/03/2023

The UK’s central bank, the Bank of England, has...

Owner of Next Level Nutrition Isle of Man, Angela Clucas, Island Influencer

Owner of Next Level Nutrition Isle of Man, Angela Clucas, Island Influencer

15/03/2023

Angela Clucas, the owner of Next Level Nutrition Isle of...

Kind words

  • Your newsletter was timely this morning. Given our previous years’ expenses, how long can we afford to live? I’m asking it this way because a friend of mine, who Sharon will know, was going on about financial planning is little good if you don’t know when you’re going to die. I turned it around and said: “but they can tell you how long you can afford to live”. If they said I could afford to live until I was 70, or maybe 110, it would change our spending.

    Mike & Aggie

Get our free email newsletter

 

Chartered Financial Planners

Our Chartered status is your guarantee of a higher level of expertise in personal and business financial advice, as it requires us to be held to prestigious standards set out by the Personal Finance Society.

© 2023 · Thornton Associates Ltd | Privacy Policy | Site by Bear Content

Prev Next