47 answers

Should We Ask Our Daughter to Pay Rent?

Hi Moms:
We have a 25 year old daughter who has been living at home during
her senior year of college ( to help save money.. she commuted on the train downtown to school)

and has been living with us off and on afterwards. We have not asked her
for any money to live here to this point.. (food.. using the car.. groceries). She was employed by a company
downtown and living near the city and then was laid off back in the spring. We helped her with
paying her school loans ( over $500 a month) after she lost her job. Fortunately, a month ago, she found a good job and is back on her feet.
She is currently living at home and driving my new car as she has a 40 minute commute to her new job ( my new car gets better gas mileage than our older car)
and I'm driving the older car. We are considering asking her to help pay something to live here now. She has been very responsible about
making all of her school loan payments up until the time she was unemployed. I'm not sure what is reasonable to ask her to pay us. She has the big chunk of school loans.. and her medical/dental/vision.. I think she is bringing home something like $900 every two weeks.. not exactly sure yet. She hasn't received her first full pay check yet.
Somehow .. on some level, I feel guilty asking her for any money at all. But its a combination of reasons why I feel I should ask her to help pay us for something to live here. One other reason is I'm helping my OTHER daughter and her husband babysit our granddaughter two days a week and not asking her for any money to do that. Although I finally did ask for help with gas to get to their house..

I feel good about helping them but it does cut into my income as I'm not working those two days a week. They are struggling to pay for a babysitter the other three days a week and I didn't feel I could ask them for any additional money..

any thoughts would be greatly appreciated. I'm not sure how much to ask the daughter who is living at home to help with. II know she wants to save for a down payment to rent an apartment closer to work so I don't want to interfere with that.

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

hey everyone..
thanks so much for all of your input. Wow, what a range of responses.
So, right after I posted this, my daughter showed me a place that she can afford that is only 5-6 miles from work. Her dad and I went with her
to go and look at it and we all thought it was really nice and met all of our requirements. She can pay the security deposit and the rent. In big part becuz we didn't ask her for any money while she lived her and she saved. That was a big reason why we didn't ask her for money up until this point. If she continued to live at home, we were going to ask her to help us out financially. But I obviously had some reservations so that's why i posted the my question.

She can also cover her school loans and other bills on a monthly basis.. She has done this before in the other apt she had before she was laid off and understands about saving money as well. She knows what its like to only have a few bucks left over after you pay the bills but being on her own is more important to her. She has worked two jobs before as well to make ends meetl. She can take our older car now as I feel the car can make it 5- 6 miles each way in the shape it is currently in. The car has over $150 K miles on it and I knew it wasn't going to last much longer if she took it for a 45 minute commute to and from work.

In response to my other daughter, no, she can not stay home as they need both their incomes to pay rent and their other bills.. They have school loans and so forth. My main goal in helping them is to help them save an extra $360 per month in childcare expenses and to help keep my granddaughter at home and not have to get up so early and go to a babysitter at least for 2 days a week. I'm not sure how long I will be able to do this but I'm trying to help out atleast for this year while the baby is young.

Featured Answers

I'm happy she has found a new job. That isn't easy in these troubling times.... we know that very well!

You really should sit down with her and discuss finances..... how much will she be bringing home, how much of that will be going toward student loans, and what is she doing with the rest? Is it going into savings, or just getting blown away? How much will she need to get that apartment? There will be various deposits to pay, utility fees, etc. that she will need to pay right at the beginning, also.

Some people, as they've helped a family member in need, have asked for "rent", and then saved that money, giving it all (or a portion of it) back to them when they left, to help them with apartment fees, deposits, etc.

4 moms found this helpful

When I stayed at my parents in my early 20's, I did the housework and lawn in exchange for living there for free.

Maybe ask her to do this UNTIL she can start paying you income?

She should be doing something...

btw - you are both generous and loving parents to go this far to help (:

3 moms found this helpful

I started working at 14. My mother made me pay a rent of 15% of my take home pay per week. Plus I bought my own school supplies, clothes, and personal items, if I wanted something different then she usually bought.( ie, she bought Colgate toothpaste, I wanted Aqua fresh so I had to buy my own.) I left home at 17, and was prepared to have to pay my way. Had I gotten a free ride, I would have been totally blindsided by the responsibility of paying my way through life. IMO having a child pay rent should be less about needing the extra money and more about teaching how to make a dollar stretch. And in today's world that means sacrifice and that's not a bad lesson to learn.

3 moms found this helpful

More Answers

It will be a great life lesson for her future budgeting skills to ask her to pay about $100 per week toward food, utilities etc. If it were me, I would then use $75/week to help with food & utility bills and take the other $25 and put it away for her. At the end of a year, you would have put away $1200 for her and that will come in handy for a security deposit etc for an apartment (don't tell her, it will be a wonderful surprise!). If she can't afford her own place, she can find 2 or 3 reliable room mates and share the expenses (which is a great way to start out). You are a great & generous mom & dad :) On the car...sorry, no way would my daughter be driving my new car while I drive her old one. She needs motivation to save her money for one with better gas mileage and driving your new car will not do that! Switch back!

6 moms found this helpful

If you don't start making them pay they will never have an incentive to do it on their own. The minute my son was no longer in school he had to pay rent. It is ridiculous to not do that. If you really want to help her with the down payment then make her pay a bit more in rent and put the difference towards her down payment.

I have a lot of friends that are dealing with this and what we are finding is by allowing them to continue to stay at home with no real responsibilities they are blowing the extra money on living the life.

Yes they are not making the money they thought they would but they are making enough to support themselves. It is just not in the lifestyle they are accustomed to. We as parents feel guilty that they cannot afford what we had but keep forgetting it is not our fault. They really don't work as hard as we did, maybe that is our fault.

It wasn't easy raising over and over what my son had to pay until he got that it is easier to be on his own but it felt a bit better than outright kicking him to the curb. He has his own place now and it actually saving money. He doesn't blow it like he used to on just stupid stuff.

Anyway just my two cents. Oh and I wouldn't watch grandkids if it means me losing money, that is just silly. Especially when most likely you are losing more money than they are gaining by working while you watch your granddaughter. It is probably cheaper for your daughter to stay home with your granddaughter than it is for her to work. Even with you watching her two days. They just haven't done the math because you are handicapping them by watching her.

5 moms found this helpful

Wow. Draw up a rental contract ASAP. Include how much she would owe for her room, her share of food, the phone (especially if you pay for her cell phone), her share of electricity, water and other utilities, gas, car maintenance, doing her laundry, preparing her meals, everything. Write up the contract as if you were going to have a stranger renting out her room. Then have her sign it and then you stick with it. Include chores in that contract, and include her driving the OLD car. Why should you drive the old car? I don't get that.

If she doesn't stick to the contract she has to get her own place sooner rather than later. It doesn't take long to scrape up first and last month's rent.

What having a contract will do for her is get her moving more quickly to reach her goals of independence. Just don't cut her a break on rent or she won't be motivated to move out.

5 moms found this helpful

She's 25, not 18. It's getting to the "enabling" point imho. Same for your other child and the baby-sitting (though if you WANT to spend time with your grandchild and you don't mind then that's a different story).

Are these children going to support you when you can no longer work? That's how I'd start looking at it.

I don't want to lean on my children in my old age - AT ALL - but most of us are probably going to have to work very hard prior to retirement to get in a good enough financial position to not have to worry about burdening our children.

Full disclosure: my kids are 17 & 14 and I haven't hit this stage yet, so it's easy for me to offer up this advice right now. I'm love my sons so much that I could easily see myself doing what you're doing. :P The question is, just because we love them should we "enable" adult children?

4 moms found this helpful

When I read this subject line I thought I was going to read about how your daughter lives at home and was completely taking advantage of you. That doesn't seem to be the case. Your daughters sound very responsible and I bet if you mentioned that you are struggling a little bit, they would both help you as much as they can. I lived with my mom for many years after I returned home from college. I had a good job as a teacher but was also working on my master's degree. I didn't pay rent on a monthly basis, but I did pay my student loans, car payment, etc. and helped with big things like if something needed to be repaired or money was tight, I helped in that regard. Perhaps you all could pray on what would be the right amount or set some parameters that sound reasonable to both of you. I was so grateful to my mom for letting me earn my degrees and still have some money to spend, but I was more than willing to help her out if she needed it and it sounds like your daughter(s) will too. Good luck!
A.

4 moms found this helpful

I'm happy she has found a new job. That isn't easy in these troubling times.... we know that very well!

You really should sit down with her and discuss finances..... how much will she be bringing home, how much of that will be going toward student loans, and what is she doing with the rest? Is it going into savings, or just getting blown away? How much will she need to get that apartment? There will be various deposits to pay, utility fees, etc. that she will need to pay right at the beginning, also.

Some people, as they've helped a family member in need, have asked for "rent", and then saved that money, giving it all (or a portion of it) back to them when they left, to help them with apartment fees, deposits, etc.

4 moms found this helpful

Your daughter sounds lovely! That my son will be that responsible in 10 years. :)

There is nothing wrong with asking grown children to contribute to the household. She is an adult now, and I am assuming, free to come and go at will with no curfews etc. so, she is now more like a room mate than a dependent child. Sit down with her and open the discussion about "rent".

Decide what you need to help cover the extra expenses of her living at home in a time when your income has been cut. Consider the dollar value of renting a room with bath in a home in your area (check the rental listings in the local paper) then consider the value of the baby sitting that you are providing to your other daughter. Okay, now if you want to ensure you being really fair - subtract the value of baby sitting from the value of rental, and charge your at home daughter the difference.

If you really don't need the money then put it in a separate bank account and when she is ready to move out write her a check to help her get set up.

One of my friends has two of her adult children still living at home - they both work and both contribute to the household. They are a home of adults living together - so it is a combination that works. It saves the "kids" money as they get established in their careers but also makes them responsible adults. Win-Win.

Good Luck
God Bless

4 moms found this helpful

Take back the car. Se can drive the old car and pay the gas.
Do make a list of all of the expenses and then have a conversation about what would be fair for her to contribute.

Just be honest.. Things are tough on everyone.. even you and your husband..

4 moms found this helpful

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