I created a new account just for privacy but I've been a DIS member for many years. We have a son living at home who graduated from auto mechanic school in June. He has always worked and started working full time the day after he graduated. He doesn't make much and lives at home. The problem is he always spends more than he makes. He spends tons of money on gas because he likes to drive around, on food, on his car, and other things. He will find ways to use things like PayPal or Game Stop credit to buy things but won't have the money to pay it off and then will get letters from creditors. When we talk to him he basically says he just can't help himself. So we have been trying to make things less comfortable for him at home to try to get him to curb his spending. Right now we pay for his car insurance & phone. He has to have the car for work and needs the phone in case his boss needs him to come in etc. We turned off the internet on his phone but we are having trouble coming up with other ways to get the lightbulb to turn on so he is better about spending. We do charge him "rent" which in reality we put away for him because he has zero savings. He was good about giving us the money but then had some car repair expenses and missed a few payments. We worry about his credit and we did recently pay off his $400 balance on the Game Stop bill because it was about to go to collections. He won't even sit down to discuss money with us. We are super good with money and try to give him advice but he is extremely resistant. He is impulsive with spending.
So I'm looking for advice on how to make him a little less comfortable at home so he feels like he wants to pay us for the bills we laid out money for and his "rent" so he can get XYZ back. I'm doubt turning off his internet on the phone will be enough. We could say no more friends over. I'm not sure what else to do. Any ideas? Thanks in advance.
My number for my kids was $250 - i didn't need the money and it was just enough to irritate them and make them want out.
Do NOT pay his bills
this sounds EXACTLY like me (pretty constant with my YA ds in the past few years)
we went through it all, from the 'everyone else's parents are funding their lifestyle' to 'I think my phone might get shut off today, I can't text you'.....
to 'WHY does a parent charge rent to a child???'
(they're always our 'babies',just not literally lol)This made me laugh out loud. AND it went in my back pocket for later should the need ever ariseYour son is pretty young at 21. You can help him by lowering the rent to a reasonable portion of his earnings. $400 may be too much. My number for my kids was $250 - i didn't need the money and it was just enough to irritate them and make them want out.


OP-sorry for the troubles you are going thru. To all the posters who are just saying, throw him out of the house and let him fail, that is a lot easier said then done. It is very hard for a parent to watch their children make bad decisions and then not try to help them. OP, your boy sounds like a good kid and he will mature and get it together, maybe not help him as much. Good luck!
OP-sorry for the troubles you are going thru. To all the posters who are just saying, throw him out of the house and let him fail, that is a lot easier said then done. It is very hard for a parent to watch their children make bad decisions and then not try to help them. OP, your boy sounds like a good kid and he will mature and get it together, maybe not help him as much. Good luck!
).You can't let your adult children move into Senior Housing with you.
I created a new account just for privacy but I've been a DIS member for many years. We have a son living at home who graduated from auto mechanic school in June. He has always worked and started working full time the day after he graduated. He doesn't make much and lives at home. The problem is he always spends more than he makes. He spends tons of money on gas because he likes to drive around, on food, on his car, and other things. He will find ways to use things like PayPal or Game Stop credit to buy things but won't have the money to pay it off and then will get letters from creditors. When we talk to him he basically says he just can't help himself. So we have been trying to make things less comfortable for him at home to try to get him to curb his spending. Right now we pay for his car insurance & phone. He has to have the car for work and needs the phone in case his boss needs him to come in etc. We turned off the internet on his phone but we are having trouble coming up with other ways to get the lightbulb to turn on so he is better about spending. We do charge him "rent" which in reality we put away for him because he has zero savings. He was good about giving us the money but then had some car repair expenses and missed a few payments. We worry about his credit and we did recently pay off his $400 balance on the Game Stop bill because it was about to go to collections. He won't even sit down to discuss money with us. We are super good with money and try to give him advice but he is extremely resistant. He is impulsive with spending.
So I'm looking for advice on how to make him a little less comfortable at home so he feels like he wants to pay us for the bills we laid out money for and his "rent" so he can get XYZ back. I'm doubt turning off his internet on the phone will be enough. We could say no more friends over. I'm not sure what else to do. Any ideas? Thanks in advance.
If you keep rescuing him, why would he bother to learn financial discipline?
It is not what you do for your children, but what you have taught them to do for themselves that will make them successful human beings....famous quote!
stop being an enabler and allow your child to 'grow up'. he needs to take responsibility now or he never will. your choice. is that plain enough?
form the moment my children started working they were taught (told) that they needed to put 25% of their income away for a long term savings. 10% went to a gift fund so when b-days, Christmas, mother/father days came they would not be scratching their heads wondering where the money was coming from. they had to put money into charity. they had 50% of their wages that they could do what ever they wanted with. once they completed school, they had to pay rent. they were taught (told) that if they did not live at home then they would have to pay rent somewhere so get in the habit. when they moved out in their early 20's they not only had a great nest egg to put down on the house they bought but we were able to give them back the money they gave us for rent as a gift to help start their new lives.
what started to them as a horrible thing, in their minds, turned into the best thing they ever did and they have thanked us many times over.
this is not for everyone. we each do what we feel is best for our own. they need to learn how to function without someone standing over them. you need to give that opportunity to your child.