Parents shell out '£30,000' to support adult children

Drain: three in 10 sets of parents paid their children's university fees
10 April 2012

Parents expect to have to spend more than £30,000 supporting their children between the ages of 18 and 30, research showed today.

The average parent expects to hand over £30,690 to their child, covering everything from university tuition fees, to the deposit for a house, to day-to-day living expenses.

About 93 per cent of parents with children over 18 said they were still giving them some form of financial support, according to The Children's Mutual.

Parents were most likely to help their children with general living costs at 48 per cent, while 40 per cent let them live at home for free or for a reduced rent and 32 per cent were helping them with bills.

Three out of 10 parents were paying university fees, 20 per cent had covered the cost of a wedding, 15 per cent had provided a deposit for a house and 14 per cent were repaying their child's debt.

But the burden of supporting their adult children is having a significant impact on parents' finances, with 28 per cent having to remortgage to cover the cost, while more than half have had to borrow money.

Two-thirds of parents also said they had or planned to reduce their day-to-day living costs, with 28 per cent spending less on food and 42 per cent trying to use less gas and electricity, while seven per cent claim they have been forced to sell their car.

More than half of parents said that if they knew what a drain their children would be on their finances they would have saved more, with just 13 per cent saying they had regularly set aside money to cover the cost. The survey questioned 1,484 parents with children aged over 18.

David White, chief executive of The Children's Mutual, said: "These figures unveil the stark reality of the cost of being a parent.

"No longer does turning 18 mean financial independence - in fact 16 per cent of parents questioned expected their child to remain financially dependent on them into their thirties and beyond."

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