My parents inherited £800,000 from my gran and refuse to share it with me

16 hours ago 2

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Does this week’s reader have a right to be angry over her parent’s decision? (Picture: Getty Images)
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Chloe, 29, feels betrayed by her parents after they inherited £800,000 but decided to buy a holiday home instead of helping her. The article highlights the growing reliance on parental support for housing, contrasting Chloe’s needs with her parents’ decisions. The advice given is to accept her parents’ decision, avoid resentment, and focus on saving and using government schemes.
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The transfer of wealth between generations is one of the most contentious issues in modern Britain. 

With house prices having far outstripped wage growth over the past two decades, the ‘Bank of Mum and Dad’ has become a critical pillar of the property market

But what happens when that bank decides its vaults are closed? 

This week’s Money Problem comes from Chloe, a 29-year-old renter in Bristol who feels betrayed after her parents chose to spend an £800,000 inheritance on a holiday home rather than helping her onto the property ladder. 

She asked Metro consumer champion, Sarah Davidson, for her verdict. 

The problem…

My grandmother recently passed away and left her entire £800,000 estate to my parents. 

My parents are already comfortable – they own their home and have good pensions. 

I am currently renting a tiny flat in Bristol and desperately want to buy. 

Colorful houses overlooking bristol harbor scene
In February 2026, the average house price in Bristol was £347,000 (Picture: Getty Images)

I asked my parents if they would pass some of the inheritance straight to me for a deposit, but they said they want to use it to buy a holiday home in France and ‘enjoy their retirement.’ 

Is it unreasonable of me to feel completely betrayed? Surely that money would change my life, whereas for them it’s just a luxury? 

The answer…

Chloe, I get it. 

You are watching a life-changing sum of money land in the laps of people who are already financially secure. 

You, on the other hand, feel trapped by the nightmare cycle of forking out thousands of pounds in rent that is paying someone else’s mortgage

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You’re also living in a world where help from mum and dad is increasingly the norm. 

According to Savills, less than half of first-time buyers in 2024 bought without a substantial contribution from their parents. 

But while your feelings are valid, you need to separate your emotional response from what’s actually happened here.

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Do you think it's fair for Chloe to feel 'betrayed'?

Yes, it should have at least been a discussionCheck
No, she's shouldn't presume she's entitled to the moneyCheck
I'm not sureCheck

Legally, the money belongs entirely to your parents. Your grandmother wrote her will and chose to leave her estate to them. Had she wanted to skip a generation and leave a deposit directly to you, she would have. 

Were your parents to change their minds and siphon some off to you, they could use what’s called a Deed of Variation to redirect a portion of the £800,000 directly to you. 

For tax purposes, that would be treated as though your grandmother had left it to you in the first place. 

However, it sounds like they’ve been pretty clear – they’re not on board with this idea. 

France, Dordogne, Perigord Vert, Saint-Jean-de-Cole (Plus Beau Village de France - Most Beautiful Village in France), peasant houses with flowers along the street
In 2024, it was estimated that around 86,000 British households own holiday homes in France (Picture: Getty Images/Photononstop RF)

So, is it unreasonable of you to feel betrayed? Yes, I think it is. Disappointed? Absolutely. Frustrated? Of course. But betrayal implies that a promise was broken or a duty shirked. 

Your parents do not have a duty to buy you a house. They have raised you and you are now an independent adult. The fact that they have received a windfall does not automatically turn that money into your property deposit. 

You may view their decision to buy a holiday home as a luxury and your need to get onto the ladder a necessity, but it is their luxury to choose. 

It may sound slightly morbid, but it’s also worth remembering that this money has not “gone”.

Assuming your parents don’t spend all of their wealth, you will likely inherit from them eventually. My advice is to accept their decision gracefully.

Continuing to harbour resentment over money that was never yours will only poison your relationship with your parents. Focus on what you can control. 

Save what you can, take advantage of government schemes to maximise those savings (take a look at Lifetime Isas) and consider investing some of it. 

It will take you time but when the day you get those keys in your hand comes, you’ll have earned it.

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