Moving Back With Parents Takes Planning

December 18, 2007 RSS Feed Print
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For this week's magazine, I wrote about retired parents who provide financial support to their adult children. It's a pretty common phenomenon, with about 4 in 10 adults age 60 or older giving money to their kids. In addition to assisting with cash, some parents let their grown children live with them or offer free baby-sitting. Many of the 20- and 30-something "children" I spoke with said they couldn't make ends meet without the help.

I know where they're coming from. After I finished graduate school, I moved back home with my parents for just over a year. I paid them $400 a month in rent, but it was nothing compared with what I was getting in return: a fridge filled with food, a warm house, plus parents who would hang out with me when I wanted. (By my mid-20s, I was old enough to appreciate their company again.) If I had had to get an apartment, it would have cost me at least $1,000 a month.

One of the secrets to our successful arrangement was that all of the financial details were worked out in writing. Each month, I would fill in the rent I owed them on an Excel spreadsheet and write them a check. The amount had been determined by mutual agreement before I moved back home. The fact that everything was out in the open made it easier when my younger sister moved back home, too. She paid the exact same amount each month, which felt fair to both of us.

Whether grown kids should pay their parents rent at all is debatable. Some parents say that would defeat the purpose of letting their kids move in with them; they want them to save all of the money they can for a house of their own. Other parents collect rent from their children only to give it all back to them when they move out, so they have a sizable nest egg.

In my case, both my sister and I had steady jobs. We could afford to pay the rent, and it seemed only fair, since we were at least doubling our parents' grocery bill. I was still able to save more money than I would have otherwise. And perhaps most important, paying rent made me feel like an adult, when it would have been easy to revert to feeling like a high schooler again. I was, after all, a 25-year-old sleeping in her childhood bed.

Do you have a story about living with your parents or letting your grown kids move back in with you? What worked—or didn't—for you?

• Meanwhile, check out this week's Carnival of Personal Finance for tips on retirement planning, budgeting, and shopping frugally this season.

Tags:
parenting,
retirement,
personal finance

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I was recently given an offer to move back home because my grandmother is having trouble making ends meet. As much as I don't mind moving, I currently have a fiance that's not so keen on the idea. For him, he moved out of his parents house to brother's house, then to a friend before moving out to his own apartment. Now, if we were to move in with my parent to help her afford her things, it would be a move backwards to him. To me, it would be a move forwards since we would spend a lot less than we do in this apartment, plus I get to help my grandma. We both work, so it shouldn't be so hard, right?

Well, there's still a lot of options & planning to do.. I still gotta let my fiance know and make things in written contract so that there's no mistakes made later. I just hope things work out in the long run.

Mira of PA 2:33PM September 10, 2011

In agreement, I pay them rent of $ 200.00 a month, plus phone bill, Electricity bill, most of the food.

With all the payments, and agreements of privacy and going along with what they want. Do I have any rights, while I rent from them.

Example: Mother went up stairs where I live, and took all my books out, of my room does she have that right.

One other time, she threw all my books outside on the front lawn.

What are my rights, she keeps threatening she will call the police on me. Plus, she has done it in the pass. Don't I have any legal rights and what are they?

Michelle R. Desrosiers of ME 9:32AM June 24, 2008

I have quite a story. My fiance and I needed to move in with his Mom for a "short time" that translates to a year and a haf and still going. On top of that, she still has two teenage boys at home, and we brought along our two preschoolers and a dog. While we struggle with custody issues of our children (we each have one from a previous relationship), trying to finish school part time, and trying to find real jobs, we live at home with no privacy and only one bathroom for all of us. I keep telling myself that if we make it through this, we're going to stay together forever.

We worked out many of the details before we moved in, we determined the amount of rent per adult, children and dogs stay free. We determined that we are still responsible for our family, we buy our own groceries, cook our own meals, do our own laundry and dishes, and find a babysitter when my soon-to-be-mother-in-law can't do it (she works full time too).

It has been far from easy, but I know that in the end it will be worth it. We live in a great house, our children can go to good schools, and have family around that love them. Sharing a bathroom and no privacy has been the worst of it, but I really have nothing to complain about. Our situation would be incredibly worse if we didn't have his Mom, and the way oil prices are, I think come this winter her situation would be worse if she didn't have us.

Debbie of NH 8:37AM June 08, 2008

Alpha Consumer

Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, writes about making smarter financial decisions. She’s the author of Generation Earn: The Young Professional's Guide to Spending, Investing, and Giving Back.

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