Vacation Lover
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2006
- Messages
- 918
I'm curious what you ended up doing, and if the kids are excited about the potential trip. Can we have an update?
I did a quick survey of my kids. They have little jobs and a decent sum saved in their bank accounts.
Both would gladly give up $150 of their own money if it meant they could go to disney. I think it's a no-brainer.
She knows the value of money and while her Mom gives her a daily amount of money to spend, she saves and saves to buy pins so that she has more to trade. She would absolutely know what she was spending.I personally think that asking your children to help contribute on a family vacation is absolutely fine. This my personal opinion - Your family has already enjoyed a vacation together provided totally by you and your DH. It is not in your family's norm to ask the children to pay for a piece of a vacation, but an opportunity has come up and is possible only if everyone is willing to contribute towards it. You are a family unit and if this trip is something everyone agrees on and would like to do, then why shouldn't the children have the opportunity to help make this trip happen. This trip is also about them, and they are old enough to decide if that is how they would like to spend some of their money or not. It is a purchase that they can decide on just like anything else. What do I want to do with my money - buy a Webkinz, a Wii system, save it, or go on another vacation.
There is nothing wrong with giving your children the opportunity to decide if this is something they would like to do or not. It is only wrong to force them.
The way I figure it, I have only 18 years to teach my kids financial responsibility. I do not want them going into debt, thinking of credit cards as money and I want them to have the things they want. Its one of the reasons we start an allowance by the age of 4. We count gifted money in following the correct model. The way we figure it, the IRS taxes on gifted money, then the kids should use gifted money in much the same way. Besides, unless the giver says this is for it is not their choice in how the money is spent.
Wow - your kids must be getting some pretty nice gifts because the IRS (basically) only taxes gifts greater than $11,000 and the gift tax is generally paid by the donor, not the donee.
http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/article/0,,id=108139,00.html
I would ask them! My kids are 13 & 8....and we have a giant piggy bank in our kitchen.....It's a ceramic bank that the girls & I decorated 4 years ago & it says "Disney Money" on it......to make a long story short.....we put all of our change, extra dollars etc in there to save for a trip...well youngest dd got a $100 check from my aunt for Christmas....I just asked her yesterday where she put her Christmas money....you guessed it...she put ALL of it! the check, the cash everything she got from everyone into the pig! I asked her why & she said "because I want to go back to Disney, & I don't want anything else"
So, I would ask them!
I have a similar story. Our last WDW vacation was when DS was 5. As soon as we left, I'm talking before we even got out of the state, he was telling me how much he loved it and asking when we could go back.
I told him that it takes a lot of money to go to WDW, so we'd have to try to save as much as we could.
As soon as we got home, DS asked me where he could put some of his loose change so that he could start saving for WDW. I broke out this HUGE tupperware container, and we decorated it with stickers and labeled it "This is for DS's trip to Walt Disney World!"
Ever since then, he's put in all his Bday money, all his Christmas money, all his tooth fairy money, all the money people have given him for being so cute, loose change, whatever, into this container. At last count, he had close to $400.
Of course, we're going back in about a month from now, and I have a problem.
Since he's been saving all this time for the purpose of going to WDW, I don't want to just not use his money, since he's been working hard to save that money for a while now. I don't think it would teach him a very good lesson about money if he's saved all this time, and then it gets handed to him for free.
But I don't want to use his money, I don't want to take it.
What should I do with it? Should I cash in all that loose change and just let him use it as his own spending money? But $400 is a lot to give to a young kid, and I don't think he should be able to spend that much cash. And it's not like I can give him a hundred bucks of it, because he knows how much he has.
Any (non snarky) suggestions?
I have a similar story. Our last WDW vacation was when DS was 5. As soon as we left, I'm talking before we even got out of the state, he was telling me how much he loved it and asking when we could go back.
I told him that it takes a lot of money to go to WDW, so we'd have to try to save as much as we could.
As soon as we got home, DS asked me where he could put some of his loose change so that he could start saving for WDW. I broke out this HUGE tupperware container, and we decorated it with stickers and labeled it "This is for DS's trip to Walt Disney World!"
Ever since then, he's put in all his Bday money, all his Christmas money, all his tooth fairy money, all the money people have given him for being so cute, loose change, whatever, into this container. At last count, he had close to $400.
Of course, we're going back in about a month from now, and I have a problem.
Since he's been saving all this time for the purpose of going to WDW, I don't want to just not use his money, since he's been working hard to save that money for a while now. I don't think it would teach him a very good lesson about money if he's saved all this time, and then it gets handed to him for free.
But I don't want to use his money, I don't want to take it.
What should I do with it? Should I cash in all that loose change and just let him use it as his own spending money? But $400 is a lot to give to a young kid, and I don't think he should be able to spend that much cash. And it's not like I can give him a hundred bucks of it, because he knows how much he has.
Any (non snarky) suggestions?
Wow.
This is really quite pitiful... the child has put all of his gifts in a jar for a year? I cannot even imagine!![]()

Of course, we're going back in about a month from now, and I have a problem.
Since he's been saving all this time for the purpose of going to WDW, I don't want to just not use his money, since he's been working hard to save that money for a while now. I don't think it would teach him a very good lesson about money if he's saved all this time, and then it gets handed to him for free.
But I don't want to use his money, I don't want to take it.
What should I do with it? Should I cash in all that loose change and just let him use it as his own spending money? But $400 is a lot to give to a young kid, and I don't think he should be able to spend that much cash. And it's not like I can give him a hundred bucks of it, because he knows how much he has.
Any (non snarky) suggestions?
