The phrase “the Bank of Mom and Dad” has become shorthand for something genuinely significant in the financial lives of families: the transfer of money — gifts, loans, co-signed debts, subsidized rent, car payments quietly absorbed — from parents to adult children. By some estimates, parents collectively transfer more than $500 billion annually to their adult children in the United States. The Bank of Mom and Dad is, by a wide margin, one of the largest informal financial institutions in the country.
For adults in their 50s and 60s, this dynamic is often at its most intense. Their children are at the ages — late 20s through late 30s — when the financial pressures of establishing adult life are sharpest: student debt, housing costs, starting families, building careers in a gig-heavy economy. And their parents are at the ages when the financial stakes of their decisions are highest: retirement is near enough to be real, savings are at their most consequential, and the cost of financial missteps is borne over a much longer horizon.
The decision of whether and how to help deserves a framework — a way of thinking through it that moves beyond pure emotion toward clear-eyed assessment.
Step One: Know Your Own Number First
Before any decision about helping your children can be made responsibly, you need to know where you stand relative to your own retirement needs. This is not optional. It is the prerequisite for every other decision.
Work with a financial advisor or use a reputable retirement calculator to estimate: What will your annual expenses be in retirement? What income will you have from Social Security, any pensions, and your savings? Is your projected income sufficient to cover projected expenses for a 25- to 30-year retirement horizon? If the answer is yes with room to spare, you have more flexibility. If the answer is a tight yes or an uncertain one, your margin for generosity is narrow and should be treated accordingly.
Step Two: Distinguish Between the Types of Help
Not all financial help carries the same risk or meaning. It is worth being clear about what kind of help you are actually being asked for (or are considering offering):
Gifts from current income: Money given from what you earn or from discretionary cash flow, not from savings or retirement accounts. This is generally the safest form of generosity. The 2026 annual gift tax exclusion allows you to give up to $18,000 per person per year without gift tax implications ($36,000 for a couple).
Gifts from savings or retirement accounts: Money taken from accounts that are doing compounding work on your behalf. This carries real long-term cost and should be treated with great care.
Loans to children: Lending money to a child is not inherently harmful, but it carries relationship risk if repayment becomes complicated, and tax implications if interest is not charged at the IRS minimum rate (the Applicable Federal Rate). Many family loans become gifts in practice.
Co-signing debt: When you co-sign a loan for a child — a mortgage, a car loan, a student loan — you are not just vouching for them. You are legally responsible for the debt if they default. This can affect your own credit, your ability to borrow, and ultimately your financial security.
Ongoing subsidies: Paying a child’s phone bill, contributing to rent, covering health insurance — these are recurring commitments that, while individually manageable, can accumulate into a significant annual outflow that erodes savings over time.
Step Three: Apply the Four Questions
When a request for help arrives — or when you are considering offering — four questions can help structure the decision:
1. Does this come from surplus or from savings? If the money would come from current income or from assets you genuinely do not need for retirement, the risk to your own security is low. If it would come from retirement savings, require you to reduce your own savings rate, or be funded through debt, the cost is real and should be weighed carefully.
2. Is this a one-time need or the beginning of a pattern? A child going through a medical crisis or an unexpected job loss is different from a child who has habitually spent beyond their means and comes to you regularly to cover the gap. One-time, genuine emergencies warrant a different response than recurring requests that substitute for financial discipline.
3. Does helping address the root problem or just the immediate symptom? If a child is struggling financially because of a structural issue — insufficient income, excessive debt, poor financial habits — giving them money addresses the symptom but not the cause. In some cases, a conversation about financial planning is more valuable than a check. In others, assistance paired with accountability is appropriate.
4. What is the impact on siblings? Financial assistance given to one child affects family equity. If you help one child with a down payment and cannot help another, or choose not to, the dynamics are real and can be lasting. Many families handle this through a “we’ll do the same for each of you” framework, which has the useful side effect of naturally constraining the amount given to any one child to what the parents can afford for all.
The Loan That Protects the Relationship
Some parents find that structuring assistance as a formal loan — with a written agreement, a repayment schedule, and at least a nominal interest rate — preserves both the relationship and the integrity of the family’s financial picture. The child takes the obligation seriously. The parents have a paper trail. And if repayment becomes difficult, the loan can be forgiven, at which point it becomes a gift — but one that was made with clear eyes.
This approach is not suitable for every family or every situation, but it is worth considering when the amount is significant and when clarity matters.
The Permission to Say No
There is a cultural expectation — particularly among parents who themselves built financial security the hard way — that helping your children is simply what you do. This expectation can be powerful enough to override financial common sense.
The permission to say no — or “not right now” or “not in that form” — is not selfish. It is responsible. A parent who depletes their savings to help a child in their 30s may find themselves dependent on that same child in their 80s, which is a far heavier burden than any down payment assistance. Protecting your own financial security is, ultimately, a form of protecting your children’s future.
Related Articles
- Home Equity, Downsizing, and the Housing Decision After 50
- Your Money First: Why Protecting Your Retirement Must Come Before Helping Your Kids
- How to Talk to Your Adult Children About Money — Without Damaging the Relationship
- Do You Know Your Retirement Number? How to Calculate What You Actually Need
