Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I want to help DS to purchase his first townhouse, around 1M, but we want DS to have skin in the game. DS has lived at home with us for three years and saved up 95% of his annual salary, after taxes, for the past three years with about 240K in his account. When he officially moved out two months ago, we gave him 600K for his 1M home purchase down payment. IMHO, that is the right approach.
I have no issue with the amount, but I think it’s bizarre that he’s jumping from mom and dad’s house to major $$ homeownership. He likely doesn’t have any idea how to budget for groceries, keep up a house, buy cleaning supplies, etc.. renting a house with roommates was invaluable for me in my 20s. He’d be much better off renting and investing that 600k as well as his own savings until he actually needs that amount of space and is ready to commit to a location (spouse’s commute, schools, etc all playing a role) What if he gets a dream job far away? I bought a small condo in my 20s downtown but knew it was likely a 5 year investment, no way would I have paid for that much house for many many years I didn’t need kid’s rooms!
That's the right approach? Giving him 600K?? You call that having skin in the game? LOL.
The kid lived at home for 3 years post college and saved 95% of his salary---so he lived fairly frugally. That is skin in the game. It shows he's committed to not just blowing all his money on luxury items. He has 240K in savings/emergency fund. Now that he knows he wants to stay in the area (likes his job, etc) he wants to settle down. What parent would not help a responsible kid if they have that much money?
I get it---you are jealous that you can't do that or didn't have that happen. But it doesn't mean the kid does not have "skin in the game"
Yes, I am jealous that I can't do that for my kid. But, seriously, 600k to buy first home that is $1 mil? That PP is out of her mind or a troll. I think she was trolling us.
Anonymous wrote:At what age do you stop wiping their nose and their butt? And when they experience a rough day at work, do you march into their office and yell at their boss?
Anonymous wrote:Help them. My parents helped me and it meant a massively stable financial situation - led to a massive amount of equity over long term and my ability to freeze housing costs for years.
Anonymous wrote:I think it will be exceedingly difficult for my kids, now in their 20s, to buy a first home without help. We'll be able to help, and plan to, when the time comes. Why should they wait till we die for money to be passed down if it can be put to use now? This "I pulled myself up by my bootstraps by brown-bagging it -- they will, too" attitude only goes so far when housing prices are this insane, yet I hear those kinds of comments frequently. To me it's delusional. Has anyone's young adult bought a house in the past year? Did you help?
Anonymous wrote:If you’re worth $50m+, why in god’s name are you hanging out on DCUM? Don’t you have better things to do?
Anonymous wrote:If you’re worth $50m+, why in god’s name are you hanging out on DCUM? Don’t you have better things to do?
Anonymous wrote:Help them. My parents helped me and it meant a massively stable financial situation - led to a massive amount of equity over long term and my ability to freeze housing costs for years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At what age do you stop wiping their nose and their butt? And when they experience a rough day at work, do you march into their office and yell at their boss?
Jealous?
We don't do any of that--our kid's function completely on their own--the one out of college lives in a place they can afford completely on their own and manages their life completely on their own, save a few questions that most young adults have in new to them situations (ie learning to navigate their health insurance and car maintenance, etc.)
But when you are worth $50M+, it's financially smart to start gifting while you are still alive. So when they hit the point of wanting to purchase (4-5 years out of college), we will ensure they have a nice place, yes nicer than they would on their own. Why not...we cannot take the money with us. It is possible for rich kids to be fully functioning adults, in fact majority of them are just that, just with a few perks of knowing they can take more risks because they have a secure system in place to fall back on.
Anonymous wrote:At what age do you stop wiping their nose and their butt? And when they experience a rough day at work, do you march into their office and yell at their boss?