Do they have a job? Then they pay. Or have Friendsgiving where they live. Land the chopper, mum. |
A family isn't built out of money. What was built was entitlement and pursestrings. |
Once they start earning enough money to make it affordable. However, if you yourself are financially struggling, you can stop after 21, by then they are adults and responsible for their own expenses. If they don't earn, its their problem to solve. That being said, once parents stop paying, most kids don't visit as often. |
It’s not less entitled to expect cash strapped young adults with minimum amount of annual leave to spend on their parents. |
People who love people do nice things for them. Generally speaking, parents have more money than their young adult children. Not always, of course. But if they do, it makes perfect sense to me that the parents would pay for the plane tickets until the kids are able to pay for themselves. There is no set age. I remember my parents asking each year "would you like us to get your ticket home for Christmas?" and I'd say "that would be great, thank you," until one year, I said "no thanks, I got this." No drama, no judgment, no passive aggressive messaging. |
I wouldn't pay if it would put me into debt. I think it's fine to skip a year and kid can do their own thing.
But I'd also be seriously considering the decisions I made that $500 for my kid to fly home to see me will put me into debt. That's bad news. |
I’d pay but tell them to come home and get a job and grad school. |
I would hope that if I weren't able to afford to fly my kid home, I could just tell them "I can't afford to fly you home," and they would be much less judgmental than you about it. |
This |
Well, DH has an intense provider complex, so we pay for adult kids and his parents anytime they visit. He does this at the cost of delaying his retirement well past the traditional age. I wish the kids and my in-laws would recognize the sacrifice and decline, but both seem more than pleased to take advantage. |