Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My late-70s parents have about $20 million in assets I know about and more in assets I’m not aware of, so I imagine my two siblings and I will some day inherit at least $2 or $3 million each even if they spend most of their money on care. But I’m hoping that’s not for many years, and I’m not making financial decisions accounting for it. I don’t think a sudden windfall that gives me more money than I thought I’d have would be a terrible financial hardship to plan around, and I don’t think we’re suffering now because we aren’t spending more.
These insane assumptions about care are really something. Imagine an elderly couple spending $17 million on end of life care.
I’m not assuming they will, I’m saying that even extremely conservatively, I imagine I’ll inherit several million dollars. But it isn’t my money yet, and I don’t want it to be any time soon, so I’m not spending it now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My late-70s parents have about $20 million in assets I know about and more in assets I’m not aware of, so I imagine my two siblings and I will some day inherit at least $2 or $3 million each even if they spend most of their money on care. But I’m hoping that’s not for many years, and I’m not making financial decisions accounting for it. I don’t think a sudden windfall that gives me more money than I thought I’d have would be a terrible financial hardship to plan around, and I don’t think we’re suffering now because we aren’t spending more.
These insane assumptions about care are really something. Imagine an elderly couple spending $17 million on end of life care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You shouldn’t change anything. Act as if you won’t get it. 6 million isn’t enough to live on anymore, so don’t get ahead of your self planning on a possible inheritance.
6m is very conservatively 200k+ per year. You can easily live on that.
Yeh in 1980
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You shouldn’t change anything. Act as if you won’t get it. 6 million isn’t enough to live on anymore, so don’t get ahead of your self planning on a possible inheritance.
6m is very conservatively 200k+ per year. You can easily live on that.
Anonymous wrote:My late-70s parents have about $20 million in assets I know about and more in assets I’m not aware of, so I imagine my two siblings and I will some day inherit at least $2 or $3 million each even if they spend most of their money on care. But I’m hoping that’s not for many years, and I’m not making financial decisions accounting for it. I don’t think a sudden windfall that gives me more money than I thought I’d have would be a terrible financial hardship to plan around, and I don’t think we’re suffering now because we aren’t spending more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You shouldn’t change anything. Act as if you won’t get it. 6 million isn’t enough to live on anymore, so don’t get ahead of your self planning on a possible inheritance.
6m is very conservatively 200k+ per year. You can easily live on that.
Anonymous wrote:i supported my parents through the last 25 years of their life; that was mostly 30k a year until the last several years which turned into more like $200k a year with memory care.
there is currently a generational trust in my spouses family but they are likely to live at least another 25 years. i view the actual inheritance to be the fact that we won't have to monetarily support them in old age. the primary lifestyle change we made is that we did decide to have children; i probably would not have done IVF if there had been any danger of needing to support the previous generation for significant years.
they have set up nice 529s for our children, and they buy the plane tickets for us to visit; those are the primary extent of our planning reliance on their money. (though we still contribute what our state allows for deductions to another 529). spouses tax-advantaged retirement funds are a little light for their age, which likely reflects some unconscious reliance on inheritance but their overall portfolio is fine. i'm contributing the max i can to mine including catch-up.
in short, my perspective is that there is no windfall coming, and i live my life accordingly. our newest car is almost 20 years old and that's completely fine. we have a decent UMC life, and i'm delighted to hopefully have decades where they can enjoy their grandchildren.
Anonymous wrote:You shouldn’t change anything. Act as if you won’t get it. 6 million isn’t enough to live on anymore, so don’t get ahead of your self planning on a possible inheritance.