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GOBankingRates
Jordan Rosenfeld

I Asked ChatGPT If Middle-Class Households Can Afford To Help Adult Kids Without Hurting Their Retirements — Here’s the Tradeoff

SpeedKingz / Shutterstock.com
SpeedKingz / Shutterstock.com

In an era of higher costs of living, it’s unsurprising that many middle-class parents are stepping in to help their adult children stay afloat beyond the college years.

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But as retirement looms closer and costs continue rising for parents, too, how much help is generous and how much is financially dangerous? I asked ChatGPT to help me look at the tradeoffs.

How Much Are Middle-Class Parents Actually Giving?

Financial support for adult children has become more common in recent years, likely due to higher costs of living and an evolving job market. ChatGPT drew on data from AARP that showed nearly three-quarters of parents are helping their adult children beyond the traditional college ages of 18 to 22 with housing, student loans, insurance premiums and even groceries.

For middle-income households that don’t have significant wealth, even a few hundred dollars per month that go into an adult child’s bank account versus retirement, can mean tens of thousands less invested over time. For parents in their 40s and 50s, that opportunity cost compounds quickly.

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The Real Risk Isn’t the Gift — It’s the Compounding

In order to figure out if parents can afford to help their adult kids and still save well for retirement, ChatGPT laid out some simple but enlightening math: If parents redirect just $500 per month away from retirement toward their kids for five years, that’s $30,000 of money that could be earning around 6%(conservatively) on average if invested in traditional retirement accounts over 15 or 20 years.

At a 6% average return, after five years of monthly investing, that account would be worth about $34,900. Now assuming no additional contributions, just growth over 15 years, that sum would be $83,700. That’s a pretty significant chunk of change to miss out on.

What it comes down to is whether or not middle-class households have budgeted for this or have liquidity to make it possible, ChatGPT said.

When Helping Adult Children Becomes Retirement Self-Sabotage

Helping adult children can feel temporary, but retirement funding gaps have a permanent impact. Once time is lost in the market, it can’t be recovered without taking on more risk or working longer.

ChatGPT shared some situations that increase risks for middle-class parents:

  • Raiding 401(k) or IRA accounts
  • Taking on Parent PLUS loans close to retirement
  • Cosigning mortgages or car loans that increase debt-to-income ratio
  • Delaying catch-up contributions after 50
  • Postponing downsizing

When Financial Help Can Be Done Responsibly

That said, there are definitely ways for middle-class parents to help their adult kids out that don’t come at a huge cost to their own retirement, ChatGPT said. This includes things like:

  • Setting a defined dollar cap or time limit
  • Helping with strategy instead of cash (budgeting, career coaching, housing trade-offs)
  • Funding one-time transition expenses rather than ongoing bills
  • Using taxable savings instead of retirement accounts
  • Protecting minimum retirement contribution thresholds

Support works best when it is structured and temporary, ChatGPT said. Open-ended assistance can threaten retirement plans.

The Retirement Stress Test Every Parent Should Run

The best strategy is knowledge and planning, ChatGPT said. Parents should run a retirement projection that includes what it will look like not to make retirement contributions for two to three years. They may have to consider working several additional years or delaying Social Security claiming to fund this support. All future retirement planning should include factoring in healthcare costs.

If helping your kids now means you may need financial help later, the strategy likely needs revision. Retirement security should not depend on children who are still financially unstable.

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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: I Asked ChatGPT If Middle-Class Households Can Afford To Help Adult Kids Without Hurting Their Retirements — Here’s the Tradeoff

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