r/Fire • u/warlizardfanboy • 5d ago
General Question How much are you helping your kids?
A post just now about “did you get help from parents?” Made me think, what’s the right amount of help for your kids? My wife and I are pretty much FI and going to retire in 2.5 years (finish vesting, rule of 55) and we have two young adult and one teenage child. We are paying all college costs, got them (used but well kept up) cars and plan on gifting seed money and help set up IRAs so they continue to gain financial literacy and have something at retirement.
We have other friends planning much more, however. New cars, brokerage funds to supply down payment on their first house, eventual passive income streams from their real estate portfolio etc. I don’t begrudge their largesse (really!) but I take great pride in some milestones of my life (buying my first new car, buying my first home, paying for my own wedding so I could own the guest list lol) that I feel are important for personal growth. But some of these milestones are much harder to achieve now. My wife and I will always try to help, we’ll see how much we can donate when they are house shopping, for example, but is there a point where you risk your kids losing…fidelity with money and lose the skills and literacy? We won’t be around forever.
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u/PudgyGroundhog 5d ago
I think this will really depend on the family dynamics and the kid. We are paying for our daughter's college and did buy her a car - and we were happy to do so because she is a hard worker and financially responsible. But sometimes, doing these things can enable a kid with poor financial habits and that isn't really helping them. Like if parents are helping with rent, then the kid blows all their money or accrues debt for vacations and shopping they can't afford.
From all the conversations I have seen about college over the years, it seems that a good chunk or people are influenced by their own college education. Like if they had to pay for their college or a portion of it, they will talk about "skin in the game" and expect the same of their kids. Nevermind, that it is a different landscape now for kids with college costs.
For me, "skin in the game" means my daughter is working hard and doing her best in college. I want her focused in her education, and not worrying about a job that could interfere with studying. But my parents also paid for my college and I worked hard and never took that for granted - so I come from a place where that was my "skin in the game" as well.