Anonymous wrote:The kids don't look at it like the adults do. The only child will feel like everything is equal if each kid gets the same number of gifts (or around the same price), and that's what matters.
I have an only child. My brother has 3. I spend approximately $30 on each niece, but would never expect them to spend $90 on our son. If they spend $30 on my son, it seems even Steven to me!
Anonymous wrote:I just can’t understand the gift giving logic so many of you have. We have 2 and DHs brothers each have 3. We spend approximately the same on each of the six kids we buy for regardless of what the others spend on my kids. It’s about giving the kids something they will enjoy and that you can afford. It has never bothered me that we spend more than the others on gifts.
Anonymous wrote:I have none and my siblings have seven between them. I just buy the kids gifts.
Anonymous wrote:We are one and done, and each sibling has 3. I do get upset when we have to spend a ton of money in total for gifts and they each just spend $15 or $25 on my one kid. It doesn't help when they are far richer than we are. We've asked for the last 2 years to forego gifts and ironically the richest sibling refuses and insists on exchanging gifts.
Honestly, we are at the point where we don't get our own kid gifts we'd like to get her so that we can afford the cousin's gifts. And they don't get my kid gifts she'd want or what we would have gotten her.
OP, keep overcompensating
Anonymous wrote:I have an only and my brother has 3. He is the opposite of you and it annoys me. I buy for all his kids birthday, Christmas and Easter. He spends the same on my one kid that I spend on each of his kids. I keep doing it though because I want his kids to know I send cool stuff...lol
Anonymous wrote:Make a gift rotation with each family (your side and your husband's side).
Assume every letter is one nuclear family. You have children A1, A2, A3 and A4. You one sibling has child B1 and your other sibling has child C1. On your side, put the six kids names into a hat and every kid draws one name. That child gives a gift to the picked child. That means that you'll buy 4 gifts and they'll each buy 1 gift. But all kids will get one gift. You open then when these cousins are together.
On your husband's side, you have A1, A2, A3, and A4. His siblings have Y1 and Z1. Same thing. Each kid (or parents) are designated to give one gift to the child drawn. You open these when this side cousins are together.
This way, when the kids get together with the cousins, everyone gets one gift. You each end up buying one gift for each child of yours to give. As they get old enough, the kids get to help brainstorm what gift to give their cousins (or siblings since your kids will end up sometimes picking a gift for a sibling instead of a cousin).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you ask your siblings to give your family a group gift? Something you all can use together--a board game, a basketball hoop, a video game, an art supply kit, whatever would be helpful? One part of my extended family does all whole-family gifts. I don't know how it started, but it's been going on for many years (through many ages and stages) and tends to work well.
This is a great idea as long as each family is on board with how much to spend. You don't want one family to be giving out Monopoly games while another family is giving out big screened t.v.s.
Maybe set the limit at $50 per family gift. If it starts to become a gift card exchange I would highly recommend switching over to the stocking gift idea.