Son Refuses To Cover Taxes On Family Home While Brother Stays With Kids

A son watched his retired parents finish paying off the family home only for them to turn and demand help with the property taxes. His 43-year-old brother still lived there with his kids, paying just $1,200 a month while using most of the bedrooms, far below local rates.

The parents planned to leave the brother half the house and split the rest between the other two siblings. When the mother suggested the son cut child support to his own boys to free up money, he refused outright and declared he would no longer help enable the lifelong pattern.

A Redditor drew a firm line against subsidizing their brother’s long-term stay in their parents’ newly paid-off home.

Son Refuses To Cover Taxes On Family Home While Brother Stays With Kids
Not the actual photo.

'AITA For telling my mother I won’t pay the taxes on their paid off home while my Brother lives there with his kids?'

Both my parents are old enough to retire and collect social security and their pensions.

My brother is 43 yrs old, has a full time job, uses 3 of the 4 bedrooms at my parents home. 1 room for himself, 2 other rooms for his...

My brother pays $1200/month to my parents for rent. The normal rent for a 3 bedroom home in that area is a $2300 and up

My parents just paid the house of 2 months ago. They are now asking my sister and I to help out with paying the taxes.

My parents have told me I will receive 25% ownership of the house, my brother living with them 50%, and sister the remaining 25% after they pass. (No favoritism there)

I told my brother “how much do you need?” (So I can pay 25% of the taxes). He said “I don’t know”

My mother then said “your father and I want to retire, we would like you, brother and sister to pay the taxes.”

I asked if the rent my brother pays isn’t enough. (My brother NEVER MOVED OUT OF THE HOUSE, and has been leeching off my parents his whole life)

My mother defended him because he takes care of running errands. Then proceeded to tell me to lower the child support I pay to my ex wife whom I have...

I said “let me get this straight- you want to f__k my kids over, just so my brother and his kids, can live a better life?

Or did you prefer, I take money out of my retirement account, penalties and all, to keep CODDLING my brother?

I’m sorry but I will not continue to enable him like you have all these years. I have my own family and bills to take care of.

The core issue revolves around parents who have just paid off their home asking their adult children to cover ongoing property taxes, while one son occupies most of the space with his family and pays below-market rent. The poster understandably balked, especially when the conversation turned toward adjusting their own child support payments to accommodate the arrangement.

Property taxes, unlike a mortgage, don’t disappear once a home is fully paid off. They remain the responsibility of the current owners (the parents) and fund local services like schools, roads, police, and fire departments. Many homeowners are surprised by this ongoing obligation after the escrow account tied to their mortgage ends, shifting full budgeting responsibility directly to them.

From one perspective, the parents appear motivated by a desire for a comfortable retirement on social security and pensions, viewing the home as a shared family asset with the promised inheritance as a future carrot. The brother’s “errands” contribution is framed as helpful, yet the poster sees a pattern of lifelong enabling that now extends to dipping into the other siblings’ resources or even impacting their grandchildren’s support.

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Opposing views might argue that family helps family, especially with aging parents, and that the brother’s rent does provide some income, though critics note $1,200 falls short of typical three-bedroom rates and may not sufficiently cover taxes plus maintenance.

This situation highlights broader family dynamics around adult children and parental resources. Research shows that perceived parental favoritism is common, with about 40% of Americans who grew up with siblings believing their parents had a favorite child. Women are more likely than men to notice it, and patterns often persist into adulthood, influencing emotional closeness, support, and even inheritance expectations. Such dynamics can strain sibling relationships and create lasting resentment.

A key expert insight comes from sociologist Jill Suitor of Purdue University, who has extensively studied within-family differences: “Children are very aware that parents differentiate… adult children are wrong the majority of the time” about their parent’s own reported preferences. This mismatch can lead to psychological consequences for family well-being, particularly when expectations around caregiving or financial support don’t align with actual favoritism.

In the context of this story, the poster’s strong boundary-setting reflects a healthy prioritization of their nuclear family. Neutral advice often includes open family discussions about finances and expectations while alive, considering options like the brother increasing rent to market value, the parents downsizing if retirement budgets are tight, or adjusting inheritance shares for fairness to reduce future conflict. Encouraging professional mediation or estate planning can help navigate these sensitive waters without pitting siblings against each other.

Ultimately, while family loyalty matters, enabling prolonged dependency can create unsustainable burdens. Clear communication and realistic planning serve everyone better in the long run.

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Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Most people believe the OP should refuse to pay the taxes and accept losing any inheritance share.

[Reddit User] − NTA stick to your Guns, let your mooching brother pay it!

question, I am in the UK what Taxes are these and why would you pay it on a fully paid up house?

Firm-Chemistry-5223 − NTA, I wouldn't either. I'd be prepared to lose that inheritance, but it's not yours to pay.

Isn't that rolled into the mortgage they're paying anyway or is the house paid off?

Curious_Puffin − I don't see how it would be the responsibility of anyone neither living in the house, nor owning the house to pay the taxes.

Surely it's your parents asset, and the taxes are owed by them entirely. If they haven't got enough they could downsize,

as so many people do when their kids are grown, or your brother can pay more rent.

I suspect this is the warm ip to them asking you to pay a share of repairs and maintenance on the property too with the inheritance being the dangled carrot....

Proud_Ad_8830 − NTA. Just tell your parents to leave the entire house to your brother and he can pay all the taxes.

FormerRunnerAgain − NTA - tell them you want 25% of the rental income they are receiving on the house.

They will likely sign the entire house over to your brother before they die, so you won't get anything.

Even if they don't, you and your sister will own it jointly with your brother, who will decide to live there rent free, not do any maintenance and trash the...

Your 25% will be a liability.

[Reddit User] − NTA. That house will never be yours- even 25%. Your parents are not going to kick him out now, and will probably leave him to handle the...

Even if your name ends up on the title, he will be living there. You can't stop your parents from enabling him,

but you can stop funneling money to him through your parents.

It will cost you your share in the house, but honestly, you were never going to see that.

12Dmoistness − Hello, I’ve made the decision to not accept the 25% on the grounds of capital gains tax, and property taxes, resentment from favoritism.

Why pay all that money on an investment I won’t receive anything from unless my brother moves out?

Which he will probably leave his kids there well after they’re 18… Too much drama. I’d rather go no contact Thanks everyone for all your feedback

[Reddit User] − NTA! Your brother should be paying the taxes on the house he lives in at a reduced rental rate.

Parents are making this everyone's responsibility and it's really not.

Like you said, you're supposed to s__ew your kids over for your 43-year-old brother? Absolutely TF not. NTA!

gloryhokinetic − NTA. Tell them you wont be paying ANY of the taxes and if that means they give your brother your 25% of the house that's just fine.

But actions have consequences. So they might want to say goodbye to your kids because that will be the last time they ever talk to them.

And if they change their mind, they better change it so you and your sis each get a 1/3 or no deal and goodbye.

What they are doing is discriminatory to you and your sis, as well as toxic and cruel.

EDIT: Also add that you will also be cutting brother and his family as well.

A commenter questions why the parents or brother aren’t covering the taxes themselves.

Itchy_Chip − NTA and not trying to throw shade on your parents but 1200/mo should be plenty enough to cover taxes

if they save it for a few months no? Or is this a mega mansion or castle somewhere.

In the end, this family money clash reveals how quickly old patterns of favoritism can strain even the strongest sibling bonds. The son chose to protect his own children rather than keep supporting his brother’s comfortable setup.

Do you think his firm boundary was the right call given the lifelong enabling, or should he have contributed to keep peace with his aging parents? How would you handle uneven inheritance and retirement pressures in your own family? Share your thoughts below.

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