Around 75% of parents are currently supporting adult children (18+), despite 53% of these children being able to support themselves. On average, parents are providing financial help to the tune of $7,000 every year. For retirees on a fixed income, helping your adult kids can quickly become a financial drain. You don’t want to turn your back on your child, but there needs to be a balance. That said, here’s how adult children’s financial problems can have a profound impact on their retired parents, and what you can do to protect your finances in the long run.
Financial Support Can Drain Retirement Savings Faster Than Expected
Many retired parents find themselves regularly helping adult children with rent, groceries, utility bills, or emergency expenses. What may begin as a temporary arrangement can quickly become a recurring monthly obligation that eats away at retirement savings. As mentioned above, nearly three-quarters of parents provide some form of financial assistance to their adult children, showing just how common this situation has become. Retirees often underestimate how much these small contributions add up over time. When retirement accounts are being used to support multiple households, savings can disappear far faster than originally planned.
More than that, some parents have been delaying their retirement to be able to continue supporting their adult kids. Some may even return to work after retiring due to the number of unexpected family obligations. A retiree who planned to stop working at 65 may find themselves working several additional years to maintain financial stability. While continued employment is not always a negative thing, working longer due to financial necessity can create stress and limit retirement freedom.
Emergency Funds Often Become Family Rescue Funds
A healthy emergency fund protects retirees from unexpected medical bills, home repairs, or vehicle expenses. Unfortunately, many parents dip into those reserves when an adult child faces a financial crisis. A son may need help after a job loss, or a daughter may struggle with rising housing costs and ask for assistance.
While helping family can feel like the right decision, draining emergency savings leaves retirees vulnerable to their own unexpected expenses. In retirement, many people find they have to spend more on healthcare than ever before. So, draining your savings can be dangerous. Once those funds are depleted, rebuilding them on a fixed income can be extremely difficult.
Housing Arrangements Can Increase Financial Pressure
The growing number of “boomerang children” returning to live with their parents has created both emotional and financial challenges for retirees. Although sharing a home may seem less expensive than providing direct cash support, additional residents often increase utility costs, food expenses, insurance costs, and household wear and tear. Research suggests that long-term co-residence with financially distressed adult children can negatively affect parental retirement outcomes. Some retirees also delay downsizing plans because adult children are living with them. As a result, housing costs remain higher than necessary during retirement.
Emotional Decisions Can Override Financial Planning
Parents naturally want to protect their children from hardship, regardless of their age. Unfortunately, emotions often lead retirees to make financial decisions that conflict with their long-term retirement goals. Financial planners frequently warn that helping adult children should not come at the expense of a parent’s future security. Many retirees find themselves withdrawing money from investment accounts, taking on debt, or reducing their own lifestyle to support family members. While these sacrifices may feel necessary in the moment, they can create lasting financial consequences.
Protecting Your Retirement While Still Helping Family
Retirees face unique financial challenges that younger adults often do not fully appreciate. Healthcare costs, inflation, long-term care expenses, and increased longevity all require careful financial planning. Retirees need substantial savings because many people live decades beyond their retirement date. That being said, there are still ways you can help your family without putting your retirement at risk.
- Establish clear financial boundaries by defining expectations and setting timelines for support.
- Don’t open yourself up to providing unlimited financial assistance.
- Offer to help with budgeting, career planning, and job networking.
- If you are willing to help with a one-time emergency, make it known that it is a one-time thing.
- Make retirement security a priority over everything else.
By maintaining healthy boundaries, retirees can support loved ones without sacrificing their own long-term financial stability. There is nothing wrong with helping adult children when genuine needs arise. However, retirement savings represent decades of work and are often intended to last 20 to 30 years or more. The challenge is finding a balance between being a supportive parent and maintaining financial independence throughout retirement. But you can do it with thoughtful planning and respectful conversations.
Have you ever helped an adult child financially during retirement, or do you think parents should prioritize their own retirement savings first? Share your thoughts in the comments below.
What to Read Next
9 Unique Housing Situations for People Over 60 That Don’t Want to Live With Their Adult Children
6 Signs Your Adult Child Is Financially Dependent in Ways You Haven’t Noticed Yet
7 Things You Should Never Tell Your Adult Children About Your Personal Finances
Read the full article here
