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100% charge rent. It forces your child into good financial and ethical habits of budgeting and not freeloading.
You can choose to give the rent back in the future as a gift. |
UMC + saving looks like Boomer world throwback, but I guess depends on what you mean by "U". DCUM features list of "UMC" people collecting Teslas. |
| We allow a one year rent free stay at home after graduation as long as we see you are saving/paying off debt. After a year, we start charging a negotiated rent. It's worked for us. One kid stayed the full year, and only got motivated to move (and live with roommates) after we increased rent, second kid was home for a few months but felt we cramped their social life and third got a job in another city and got a place with roommates. |
+1 |
This is exactly the way to do it! |
| Mine had a 1 year grace period and then $2000/month. |
| If you live in an expensive area and have an empty nest house with room for another person, then you are constraining supply and driving up prices, so you owe to your child and society to put that housing to use. |
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I'm sure this has been mentioned, but our policy is that once you're working, if you live with us you have to deposit money equivalent to "market rent" into a savings account for a future down payment or rental of your own. We are fine with kids in the house, but not as a crutch. We are big on saving/investing from a young age and this is not viewed as burdensome by our kids -- they also had to deposit a percent of their allowances into savings and investment accounts since they were six, so this is normal to them.
I guess if the child was not working or if we had a financial need to downsize or to use that room for something else, we might charge rent or come up with another solution. But if the home is big enough for the kids to stay, and everyone is okay with them staying, we don't insist on rent but we don't view it as a "free housing" situation either. We would not allow it if our child was just spending their savings on clothes, travel, and beer. We view living with parents as an opportunity to build savings and wealth and to maintain close family ties. So far our kids view it the same way. |
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ACs are welcome to live for free with us. No paying for rent, utilities or food. However, expectation is that they are either studying or working.
They are not paying anything to us mainly because we are financially doing ok. Having kids live with us does not impact our fixed costs of housing, utilities etc. We make enough money that the food costs and other costs does not impact us. They are on our medical insurance till they are 26. They are on our credit card until they get a full time job after studies. Before a full time job, we pay for everything. They have to put their earnings in savings. |
Unless you are dirt poor, you are a cheapskate to charge them. Why did you have a kid if you could not afford it. |
| Kid is just graduating from HS so we aren't here yet. But can imagine if he is working, collecting a small "rent" and holding it for him and then giving it to him when he moves out as first/last months rent and deposit on his new place. |
| We moved to a rural tourist town when our kids graduated hs, so I’m confident this won’t be an issue. |
Downsized from a 6000 sq ft home to a 2Bed/2Bath condo in the city, where bedroom 2 doubles as an office each day. Kids are always welcomed, but it's a bit crowded for more than a few days. |
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Depends on the finances of both parties, the relationship between them, the character of the child.
You do not bankroll a person who is aimless in life. |
| I would charge rent and put 100% into a saving account that I would give them when they moved out. |