Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids don’t even know they have trust funds.
Same here. We don't plan to tell our kids until at the earliest, college.
+2
I have a trust in excess of 10M. My kids do too. I think springing family wealth on them in college is irresponsible at best.
Well, there's a difference between saying "we have money in a trust that we'll use to pay for your college - don't worry about tuition" and "You have a HUGE trust!" and "Here's that HUGE trust I just told you about five minutes ago." We will make sure our kids know not to worry about tuition, room, board, books, meals. They will have to budget for extras simply so they really learn how to do it when we're not there to hover over them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Less than 2% according to this -
https://www.thecut.com/2018/04/what-its-really-like-to-have-a-trust-fund.html
That story is wild...talking about how it wasn't that big of a trust fund but she got handed a check for $400k???
Anonymous wrote:Less than 2% according to this -
https://www.thecut.com/2018/04/what-its-really-like-to-have-a-trust-fund.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids don’t even know they have trust funds.
Same here. We don't plan to tell our kids until at the earliest, college.
+2
I have a trust in excess of 10M. My kids do too. I think springing family wealth on them in college is irresponsible at best.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I did not, not even close. I used to tease my dad...'hey, where's my trust fund? ' and he would joke back 'you ungrateful little b*tch'. I have the same profession as my father did.
My kids will have a pretty good size trust fund. We own 2 expensive homes, etc. My dad used to say 'stinkin' rich kids' to me when I sent photos of a vacation. Or--'in my next life I want to come back as John and Will' ( real names protected).
. I have the same profession as my father did.
).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids don’t even know they have trust funds.
Same here. We don't plan to tell our kids until at the earliest, college.
+2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably about 1%. Think about it though, if 1% is “rich” I’m this country, but you live in an area where almost everyone is a 1%er, I will feel like everyone is a 1%er. So, it’s possible that everyone you sister knows does have a trust fund.
This. Particularly if you travel in certain professional circles in DC, there are a lot of people with under-the-radar family wealth. As someone mentioned upthread, most trust funds "only" have a few hundred thousand in them. That's not the kind of money that exempts you from working. So there's probably a ton of people in DC who have a trust fund or similar but still work in Big Law and consulting because they can't live off the trust. They can, however, use the trust to buy a home or put down a sizable downpayment, make investments, and other things.
It took me about a decade of living and working in DC to figure out that the reason I couldn't keep up with the spending habits of so many colleagues or friends from grad school is because, unlike me, they were not living/saving from their salary alone. It's embarrassing to say that, and of course I knew some people had family money, but for so long I just thought everyone was financing these fancy vacations and massive bar tabs on credit cards and was secretly judgmental. Turns out they could afford trips, clothes, and socializing that I could not because their family's funded their housing (and often also their vacations and wardrobes) even into their 30s. It was actually a relief when I realized it because I had previously thought that I was just missing some obvious way to stretch my income, like some investment strategy that magically netted a spare 50k a year or something. Nope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids don’t even know they have trust funds.
Same here. We don't plan to tell our kids until at the earliest, college.