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FundsForBudget > Debt > 7 Financial Requests From Adult Children That Derail Retirement Budgets
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7 Financial Requests From Adult Children That Derail Retirement Budgets

TSP Staff By TSP Staff Last updated: February 5, 2026 6 Min Read
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Retirement is supposed to be the time when you focus on your own financial security. But in 2026, the “Bank of Mom and Dad” is open later than ever. Facing high housing costs, sticky inflation, and student debt, adult children are increasingly leaning on their retired parents for support.

While helping family is natural, it becomes dangerous when it creates a recurring drain on a fixed income. A recent Pew Research study found that nearly half of young adults still receive financial help from parents. For a retiree, there is no opportunity to earn this money back. Here are seven specific financial requests from adult children that retirees are finding difficult to say “no” to, and how they derail long-term security.

1. The “Boomerang” Move-In (Rent-Free)

With rent prices remaining high in 2026, adult children are moving back home in record numbers. The request is usually framed as “just for a few months until I find a place,” but without a lease or exit date, it often stretches into years.

The financial drain isn’t just the extra groceries and utilities (which can add $300 to $400 a month); it is the opportunity cost. If you delay downsizing your home to keep a bedroom open for them, you are paying higher property taxes, insurance, and maintenance costs for a house you don’t need, solely to subsidize their housing.

2. The “Co-Sign” for Loans

Whether it is for a new car or a private student loan, co-signing is a request to risk your retirement. In 2026, credit standards are tight, and lenders are aggressive.

If you co-sign, that debt appears on your credit report as if it were your own. If your child misses a single payment, your credit score drops, potentially raising your own insurance rates. Worse, if they default, lenders can garnish your wages or put a lien on your home. You are lending your creditworthiness, which is a finite resource you may need for your own medical loans later.

3. The “Subscription” Mooch

It starts small: “Can I stay on your family phone plan?” or “Can I use your Netflix login?” But in 2026, these costs add up significantly.

A family data plan with four lines costs significantly more than a senior plan for two. Furthermore, streaming services have cracked down on password sharing, forcing account holders to pay extra fees for “out of household” members. Many retirees are unknowingly paying $100+ a month in digital subsidies for adult children who have full-time jobs.

4. The “Emergency” Bailout

“My car broke down and I can’t get to work.” These requests are the hardest to refuse because they seem like true emergencies. However, if your child has a “car emergency” every three months, it is not an emergency; it is a lack of budgeting.

Repeatedly bailing them out prevents them from feeling the necessity of building their own emergency fund. For the retiree, these unpredictable $500 or $1,000 hits destroy the ability to stick to a 4% monthly withdrawal rate, forcing you to sell investments at inopportune times.

5. The “Early Inheritance” for a House

“You’re going to leave it to me anyway, can I have it now for a down payment?” With mortgage rates making homes unaffordable, this request is common. It is dangerous because it assumes you won’t need that money for your own long-term care.

If you give $50,000 now, you lose the compound growth on that money for the next 20 years. If you eventually run out of money and need nursing care, that gift might also disqualify you from Medicaid due to the 5-year lookback rule. You cannot predict how expensive your own end-of-life care will be.

6. Grandchild Tuition “Creep”

Many grandparents agree to help with “extras” like soccer camp or braces. In 2026, this often creeps into “private school tuition” or “college savings plans.”

While noble, these are big-ticket items that have no ceiling. Unlike a one-time birthday gift, tuition is a recurring obligation that rises every year. Committing to a 5-year private school plan can drain a nest egg faster than a market crash. If you commit, it must be a fixed dollar amount, not an open-ended promise to “pay for school.”

7. The “Bridge Loan”

“I just need money until my bonus comes in.” Loans to family members are notoriously difficult to collect. In retirement, you should treat every loan as a gift.

If you lend the money expecting it back to pay your own property tax bill, you are putting your home at risk. If you cannot afford to give the money away permanently with zero expectation of repayment, you cannot afford to lend it.

Set Boundaries Now

You can love your children without financing their lifestyle. The best gift you can give them is your own financial independence, so you never have to move into their spare bedroom.

Has an adult child moved back in with you this year? Leave a comment below—share how you handle the grocery bill!

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