| There are medicaid homes they can live in. It will not be pretty, but it's a step above living in a tent. |
| Of one of them has a serious health issue that requires $$$, how are they going to pay for it? Don't tell me Medicare |
It sounds like you don't have the money to help your mother in this way without endangering your own retirement. "Where there's a will there's a way" also applies to your mom. There's no shame in finding her a place she can live in on her means. Also, this sounds very different than the OP, whose parents are not careful with their money and are possibly past the point of being able to manage it themselves. It sounds like your mom is poor through no fault of her own because she worked her butt off as a single mom to care for you and your sibling. |
| Most older people live on SS. There were pensions back in the day in some industries but not all. 401ks didn't really show up until the 80s or so. |
| You can put a lien on their home... but not the best plan for your relationship with them. |
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They have plenty of money left. It's in their house. They need a home equity line of credit on their home. I wouldn't let it impact my own future retirement but up to you. They should sell their house and rent somewhere and build that into their fixed costs. |
Of course moving doesn’t reduce their costs. What it does is free up a few hundred thousand dollars in home equity that they can use toward those costs. |
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Never under any circumstances loan money to family and friends. If the bank won't lend it then its because they dont have the means to pay it back. So you could do it as a gift, or you can help them find a way to use the equity of their house to get by.
If I was going to gift the money though, I would pry into their finances some to understand whether its a worthwhile expense or whether im just throwing away money before making the decision. |
PP you replied. Thanks for reminding me that the elderly also need to qualify medically and physically. In that case, yes, the house sale needs to be pushed back to a time when they do qualify. But if a Medicaid home is the end goal, no one should sink anything but the absolute minimum into that home. OP handles the bills, to ensure nothing goes to expenses she doesn't want. |
This especially if the reason they ran out because they are funneling money to the broke sibling. It’s really common for deadbeat siblings to not only drain their parent’s assets but to drain assets from their siblings using the parents as the conduits. If you start sending an extra few hundred a month for groceries expect a % to be sent over to the sibling. |
| My mom ran out of money at 75--she just had my dad's social security. My parents were low earners but sacrificed everything for my sister and me, so yes I supported her until she passed away at 83. I would do it again. |
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My concern would be that no matter how the 20k is paid, this is only the beginning of huge expenses coming your IL’s way.
Do they have any assets to sell like an extra car? Anything that would bring in some liquid? This is a wake up call, OP - I really think they need to sell current home and downsize immediately- they can’t sustain their current lifestyle. I think I’d list their house AS-IS and sell through a We Buy Any House type service. Get some cash and go from there. |
| Are you the only heir, if not I think it is reasonable that any money you given be paid back if they don’t fully exhaust home equity while they are alive. |
Most people don't have a house large enough for 2 additional adults. |
I am Chinese and there is no way I would live with my mom. She will take over the house. Fortunately I have enough money to buy them a separate apartment. |