| This is reasonable OP although I’d ask your siblings if they’d be okay with it instead of telling them I was doing it. I retitled my mom’s car in my name when she stopped driving due to dementia because it was the only car she could get in and out of easily (I have a large SUV). I pay insurance and maintenance and plan on buying my brother out of his share once she’s gone, unless he has a strong preference for it. It shouldn’t matter to the siblings whether it’s sold on the open market or you buy out their interests as long as they’re made whole. |
I disagree with this unless the OP is planning on immediately selling it. |
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Are you doing more for your parent than your other siblings?
My mom does the majority of the work for her Mom who has 24/7 care but my mom goes over 2-3x a day to give the medicine (medicine was going missing with the aides) and is the one who goes over if an aide or nurse calls out. She also works FT. She has three siblings within 5-10’minutes two are retired and very wealthy who visit infrequently and barely help at all. My mom’s car died and her mom told her to take her car. The siblings weren’t told but understand considering my mom has been the main caregiver for 2+ years (she and one brother share POA and co/executors). For an entire year my mom was the caregiver all night and most days after 12. She asked her siblings to find more caregivers because her mom did not want to live in a nursing home and has enough money for 24/7 care. Siblings did nothing or very little so it was something my mom also had go do. So yeah she gets the nice car, but she earned it and deserves it and if her siblings said anything I would roast them. But they don’t complain because they do very little (and they don’t need the car). I would calculate that. I think it’s fine to tell your siblings but I think you’ll also have to calculate will you be the one driving your parent to all their appointments? Are you going to be the main or one of the main caregivers? Usually that person gets something extra or they should. It is totally draining. My mom hasn’t visited her grandkids Because she has to take care of her own mother and it took me begging her siblings to cover a long weekend so she could go on a Trip with a friend. |
| Suppose parent didn't gift the car, sold it. Spent the money. No sib gets any of the value. Are they really happier with that? |
Sounds ok to me but I'm pretty easy going. |
Unless this is a Lamborghini a car is a car. |
| I’m the youngest of 4. Our mother is still alive and lives with one of the sisters who have already received their share of the inheritance — probably 50% each, as 2 of us declined. They recently found a bank account with some money and asked if we would mind if they transferred to the sister who takes care of mom. Obviously I said go ahead. I’ve done a lot for my mom in the past (financially) but an ok with not getting anything even though I might be the least well off. So I would just ask your sibling if they care about the car. Hopefully they won’t, but will appreciate you asking. |
| This is ridiculous. It’s not an inheritance. Your parents are allowed to give you a car bc they want to give you a car. I say this as the kid who received the least amount of financial help. Still, people can do what they want with their stuff. |
| Your siblings do not care about the used car. |
Honestly, if I were your sibling I’d just let you have it. It makes no sense to sell it and you need it and can have it, so. . . What’s the issue? You’re concerned about fairness after your partner dies? If you need a car and can’t afford one and your siblings have one; it’s a no brainer |
| I was thinking that your plan was a good one, then I remembered that my ILs recently shipped a car to one of their children. In our case, I’m quite certain neither of the other siblings cared or expect for things to be evened out after the ILs pass. We view it as a gift the ILs made. It didn't raise any eyebrows. |
+1 You are doing a lot of work here some of the others are not. |
Because you can't cut a car into 4 equal portions like a piece of cake. And the car will be useful to someone who needs it. |
Sure you can. It's called selling it. Not saying that's the best option, but acting like it's impossible to be equal and fair in this situation is simply incorrect. FWIW I think OPs plan is fine. |
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if your parent is fully mentally competent, I would not worry about this. your parent made the decision. stick to the parent's decision. also, for all you know your parent gave the other siblings other gifts along the way.
and if you are the local sibling who is using the car and helping your mom out, no way should you worry about this at all. |