Anonymous wrote:You stand to inherit a "sizeable sum."
PLUS, you already got:
- Home down payment paid by parents;
- Kids' private school paid by parents;
- 529s for kids college paid by parents;
- Home renovations paid by parents;
- Vacations paid by parents;
- More cash from parents.
And you're seriously complaining??? You are privileged and spoiled as F. Check your privilege lady.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem seems to be that and your DH have different priorities. He is family-oriented while you are financially oriented.
You are also pretty ignorant about serious mental health conditions and money. Your DH is right to be concerned that his brother will be preyed upon or will otherwise be penniless shortly after receiving any inheritance.
Finally, are you both in agreement about how much house to buy and how to finance it, or do you want a nicer house than he feels the need for, and you want him to fund the more expensive house with his inheritance?
You can also say the opposite. DH is financially oriented for wanting to stockpile his money for his brother and not share it like OP, while OP wants to use the money to better life for her own family.
Over the course of our marriage I have received substantial financial support from my parents that have greatly benefited our family (help with a down payment on our current house, funding kids' private school and 529s, as well as cash gifts that I have used for house upgrades and family vacations).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem seems to be that and your DH have different priorities. He is family-oriented while you are financially oriented.
You are also pretty ignorant about serious mental health conditions and money. Your DH is right to be concerned that his brother will be preyed upon or will otherwise be penniless shortly after receiving any inheritance.
Finally, are you both in agreement about how much house to buy and how to finance it, or do you want a nicer house than he feels the need for, and you want him to fund the more expensive house with his inheritance?
You can also say the opposite. DH is financially oriented for wanting to stockpile his money for his brother and not share it like OP, while OP wants to use the money to better life for her own family.
Anonymous wrote:The problem seems to be that and your DH have different priorities. He is family-oriented while you are financially oriented.
You are also pretty ignorant about serious mental health conditions and money. Your DH is right to be concerned that his brother will be preyed upon or will otherwise be penniless shortly after receiving any inheritance.
Finally, are you both in agreement about how much house to buy and how to finance it, or do you want a nicer house than he feels the need for, and you want him to fund the more expensive house with his inheritance?
Anonymous wrote:Buy a house you can afford without the inheritance.
Then, work on DH to get his mother to protect her assets. If BIL is going to lose $1M in assets that's insane to not protect NOW. She could create a trust for BIL that would protect him from financial ruin. Why would she not want to do that?
You have 2 different issues you are conflating in a panic. #1: finding a house to live in. #2: long term care of your BIL.
Anonymous wrote:OP--your BIL is mentally ill with two conditions that could require him to go into assisted living for an extended period of time. Do you realize how much assisted living costs these days? It is not unusually for it to cost $50K-$100K ANNUALLY.
If you want your DH to release his family inheritance to help towards a house, are you willing to let your comingled marital assets be available for possibly over seven figures of assisted mental health housing/living costs if your MIL dies and your BIL needs to be institutionalized?
I think you need to do a lot more reading up on assisted living and medicaid eligibility to find out if you husband comingles his inheritance, but uses your family money to help care for his brother, will your family income affect brother's eligibility for medicaid.
I think DH is doing the right thing. Using only inherited money to be reserved for BIL's care. Then, if BIL does end up needing advanced assisted living care, once the inherited funds both in his name and your DH's name are done, then he will qualify for medicaid to cover costs. But if you start using comingled money to support your BIL, then he will not qualify for Medicaid because your family funds will count against him since they were used for his care. I think it keeps the money from his family of origin separate and distinct and keeps your family separate from his brother's care and financial liability.