Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your intent is to permanently damage their sibling relationship, then sure, leave them different amounts.
+1 Can't stress this enough. My father plans on giving all of his money to my lazy brother because he "needs it more." I already told my brother that I will terminate our relationship if he doesn't give me an equal share. I also have mixed feelings about my father doing something like this.
It's also complicated because your stance on equality vs equity is likely influenced by political ideology. My father is very far to the left and I think that is a factor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spilt it absent disabilities - that amount is in the (high end of the) sweet spot of being significant even when split to be a very generous inheritance/safety net - but not so significant that flat out greed/dynastic wealth kicks in.
Regarding giving $$ to grandchildren - do they have kids yet? Do they have a similar number of kids? More kids on the way? Stepkids? That can be a landmine for many reasons (child with more kids might feel entitled to more, child with no kids might feel it’s unfair, etc etc)
Grandchildren inheritance gets complicated. You have one family 3-4 grandkids and one family with 0-1. “My brother the financial planner is pushing my parents to leave their money to the grandkids.” Can you guess who has the most kids? Imagine what it can do to the sibling and cousin relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your intent is to permanently damage their sibling relationship, then sure, leave them different amounts.
+1 Can't stress this enough. My father plans on giving all of his money to my lazy brother because he "needs it more." I already told my brother that I will terminate our relationship if he doesn't give me an equal share. I also have mixed feelings about my father doing something like this.
It's also complicated because your stance on equality vs equity is likely influenced by political ideology. My father is very far to the left and I think that is a factor.
Anonymous wrote:If your intent is to permanently damage their sibling relationship, then sure, leave them different amounts.
Anonymous wrote:How can an individual save $77 tax free annually? Is she a contractor and saving in a SEP?
Anonymous wrote:How can an individual save $77 tax free annually? Is she a contractor and saving in a SEP?