Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It is totally normal for grandparents to leave everything to the children and not include the grandchildren. The children can then decide how to divide assets among each of their kids (the grandkids) when they die.
I'm the PP with this situation (not the OP). I know that it's totally normal. It was just a surprise in our family, if for no other reason than that my grandmother specifically said, several years ago when another grandparent did this, that she would not do that when it was her time. I guess she changed her mind somewhere along the road, but we were all (not just the grandkids) surprised when it ended up that way.
Personally, I suspect that my dad and aunt have just forgotten and/or are overwhelmed with selling houses and cars and stuff. I will talk to them about it when it seems appropriate to do so, or when I have a specific reason to do so.
If your share is a substantial amount, it might not make sense for them to give it to you, tax wise. Your dad can only gift to you a certain amount, around 15,000, a year, without having to pay gift tax.
Estates take a looooong time to settle, it might just not be resolved yet.
You could ask, "dad, I'm trying to pan things financially, do you have any idea when and if I will get the money?"