Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here... would you consider financial situations? Sibling A has made no effort to save and has made many life decisions that have put them in a lesser financial situation (though far from destitute). Sibling B makes a decent income (but not extravagant) but lives very frugally and has saved since the first job out of college when they made a very meager salary.
Sibling A is also child free and Sibling B is not.
Curious the thoughts on this?
In this situation I would still divide evenly. I might take a portion of As funds and give it directly to the kids when they reach a certain age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, have you asked your parents why they are considering changing their plan from a 50/50 split to now giving more to your sibling? It sounds like something has changed and I don't think there is anything wrong with asking the question, if they have opened the topic with you.
They said our financial situation is better than sibling's, therefore we shouldn't get as much.
My family give my lazy sister more bc she "has a harder time." It pisses me off and has affected our relationship. She's not stupid. She's not disabled. She's lazy and has expected things to be given to her, and my parents indulge her.
My sister and I do not speak. And my parents should expect no help from me as they get older. My sister can handle it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here... would you consider financial situations? Sibling A has made no effort to save and has made many life decisions that have put them in a lesser financial situation (though far from destitute). Sibling B makes a decent income (but not extravagant) but lives very frugally and has saved since the first job out of college when they made a very meager salary.
Sibling A is also child free and Sibling B is not.
Curious the thoughts on this?
In this situation I would still divide evenly. I might take a portion of As funds and give it directly to the kids when they reach a certain age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, have you asked your parents why they are considering changing their plan from a 50/50 split to now giving more to your sibling? It sounds like something has changed and I don't think there is anything wrong with asking the question, if they have opened the topic with you.
They said our financial situation is better than sibling's, therefore we shouldn't get as much.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming everyone in the family gets along, is there any compelling reason to not divide an inheritance between 2 siblings 50/50?
Anonymous wrote:OP, have you asked your parents why they are considering changing their plan from a 50/50 split to now giving more to your sibling? It sounds like something has changed and I don't think there is anything wrong with asking the question, if they have opened the topic with you.
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I’d have a conversation about this with them. I’d let them know it’s not really about the money itself, but more about how they are favoring sibling A over you and rewarding them for being irresponsible and penalizing you for making good financial decisions. Tell them what they choose to do will affect not only your memories of them, but your relationship with your sibling.
Does your sibling spend more time with them? Help them out around the house/take them to the drs/etc? Could that really be the reason that they want to leave that sibling more? As a reward for helping out?
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I’d have a conversation about this with them. I’d let them know it’s not really about the money itself, but more about how they are favoring sibling A over you and rewarding them for being irresponsible and penalizing you for making good financial decisions. Tell them what they choose to do will affect not only your memories of them, but your relationship with your sibling.
Does your sibling spend more time with them? Help them out around the house/take them to the drs/etc? Could that really be the reason that they want to leave that sibling more? As a reward for helping out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here... would you consider financial situations? Sibling A has made no effort to save and has made many life decisions that have put them in a lesser financial situation (though far from destitute). Sibling B makes a decent income (but not extravagant) but lives very frugally and has saved since the first job out of college when they made a very meager salary.
Sibling A is also child free and Sibling B is not.
Curious the thoughts on this?
If Sibling A has no children and Sibling B does have children, it sounds like Sibling B is patting themselves on the back for being a parent, and thus needing to have different financial plans than Sibling A when the choice to have children is not a better or more correct choice than remaining childfree, but merely a personal preference.
My guess is that OP is Sibling B and is angling for more of the inheritance for OP's children and is using Sibling A's financial situation as justification for why the grandparents should give more money to B for the grandkids.
Nope. Should be 50/50. Sibling B then could give their kids any potion of their 50% share if they wish. Why would it come from sibling A’s 50% share? They are not sibling A’s kids.
Op here. We’d be totally fine with that and what we told was going to be the case and now they’re changing to give sibling A more
Anonymous wrote:My mom’s estate will be divided equally among siblings when she passes and she is now mentally incapacitated so nothing will change at this point. We siblings all live in different cities and moved her where I am bc they had no intentions of stepping up in any caregiving capacity. In my future estate planning, I will set aside a sizable amount for whomever has taken on my eldercare responsibilities, should that situation come to pass.