The stakes are higher than many realize:
For Grandparents:
- Compromised retirement security and delayed financial independence
- Stress and resentment about saying no to requests
- Potential inequality among grandchildren, creating family tension
- Dismissed financial goals that take a backseat to immediate needs
For Adult Children and Grandchildren:
- Stunted development of important financial life skills
- A sense of entitlement rather than personal responsibility
- Reduced self-confidence that comes from personal accomplishment
- Long-term dependence on family support
Almost 60% of parents gave financial help to an adult child (age 18 to 34) in 2023, according to Pew Research. While this support often comes from a place of love, it can prevent adult children from feeling the full weight of their own financial situation.
When Support Becomes Enabling
Financial experts identify clear warning signs that support has crossed into enabling territory:
- You regularly cover bills your adult child could and should be responsible for
- Financial help has continued for a long time with no clear endpoint
- You step in every time they run short on money
- The pattern formed gradually, one decision at a time, during a stressful season
What many grandparents don’t realize is that their support can actually remove the pressure to change. When you absorb financial shortfalls, adult children don’t have to face their own situation. They may need to earn more, spend less, or make uncomfortable adjustments. That pressure, while uncomfortable, is often how real learning happens.
The BRIDGE Method for Setting Boundaries
Financial advisors recommend a structured approach to establishing sustainable support. The BRIDGE method provides a framework that benefits the long-term well-being of your entire family:
Baseline Assessment
Honestly evaluate your current financial dynamics and their impact on both you and your adult children. Review your cash flow requirements and consider long-term needs like major medical expenses or assisted living.
Relationship Preservation
Design boundaries that strengthen family relationships while promoting independence. The goal isn’t to cut off support entirely, but to create parameters that help everyone thrive.
Implementation
Establish clear guidelines with specific timelines and expectations. Be transparent about what expenses you’ll cover and for how long.
Documentation
Create formal agreements that clearly outline expectations and consequences. This might feel uncomfortable, but clarity prevents future resentment.
Growth Tracking
Monitor progress and adjust guidelines as circumstances change. Set milestones for your adult child’s transition to independence.
Emergency Protocols
Define criteria for when boundaries might be temporarily adjusted during genuine crises like job loss or medical emergencies.