Key Takeaways
- Most families never have a real money conversation with parents – and a new generational finance guide published this month spells out exactly what that silence costs.
- The conversation does not need to cover everything at once. Two specific questions open 80% of what families need to discuss.
- Long-term care costs in many countries run between EUR 3,000 and EUR 6,000 per month – a number most adult children have not thought about until it is urgent.
- Where and how you start the conversation matters as much as what you say. Side-by-side settings reduce emotional tension significantly.
- Use the interactive tool below to build your own personalised plan – including the exact words to start with.
A friend texted me last week with a question I have heard a hundred times: My mum is turning 70 this year. Should I be asking about her finances? Honestly, I did not know what to tell her. So I went looking.
What I found was a new generational finance guide published this month by U.S. News Money – and while it is framed around the U.S., the psychology it describes is completely universal. The finding that stopped me cold: most adult children have never had a direct money conversation with parents. Not once. And the silence is not neutral – it has real financial consequences for everyone in the family.
Why the Money Conversation With Parents Almost Never Happens

Here is the thing that surprised me most. It is not that families do not care. It is that money – in most cultures around the world – is still treated like a private, almost shameful subject. A 2023 survey by the Royal London financial group found that across the UK, 62% of adults had never discussed inheritance with their parents. Similar surveys in Germany, Japan, and Brazil show comparable numbers.
The guide describes this as a generational silence loop: parents do not bring it up because they do not want to burden their kids. Adult children do not bring it up because they do not want to seem like they are waiting for an inheritance. And so nobody says anything – for years, sometimes decades.
And then a health crisis happens. Or a parent passes. And suddenly a family that never talked about money has to make six-figure decisions in a matter of weeks, under emotional stress, with no information and no plan.
The families who struggle most are not the ones with the least money. They are the ones who communicated the least. – U.S. News Money, generational finance guide, May 2026
The Real Cost of Avoiding the Money Conversation With Parents
Let me put some numbers on this, because the guide does and they are jarring.
In the UK, dying without a valid will – called dying intestate – means the state decides how your assets are divided, which often does not match what the person actually wanted. Probate disputes cost families an average of GBP 9,000 to GBP 28,000 in legal fees, according to data from the Law Society. In France, Germany, and Australia, similar unplanned inheritance situations trigger months-long legal processes that freeze assets entirely.
And that is just the legal side. The other cost most families miss is long-term care. Residential care for elderly parents costs, on average, between EUR 3,000 and EUR 6,000 per month across Western Europe. In Southeast Asia and Latin America, the costs are lower but rising fast. If nobody has discussed this in advance, adult children often end up funding it from their own savings – improvising, arguing, and resenting each other in the process.

I had no idea this was as common as it is. The guide cites research suggesting that nearly 1 in 3 families in developed economies experience significant financial friction during a parent’s ageing or death – primarily because the groundwork was never laid.
What the Guide Actually Recommends
The U.S. News guide gives a lot of advice, and some of it is a bit vague. But two specific pieces stood out as genuinely practical.
First: you do not need to cover everything in one conversation. The guide recommends starting with just two questions. Does a will exist, and does someone know where it is? And – is there anything the family should know if something unexpected happened? Those two questions, the guide argues, open approximately 80% of what families actually need to discuss. Everything else can follow over time.
Second: setting matters enormously. Research consistently shows that face-to-face, sitting directly across from someone, activates a more confrontational psychological mode. Side-by-side settings – a car ride, a walk, sitting at a kitchen counter together – reduce that tension. It sounds almost too simple, but it is backed by social psychology research going back decades.
| Approach | Best for | Potential downside |
|---|---|---|
| Casual mention over a meal | Families where money has not been a conflict | Easy to brush off or forget |
| Scheduled family meeting | Larger families with complex assets | Can feel formal and triggering |
| Written message first | Families with past conflict around money | Requires good tone – easy to misread |
| Neutral third party adviser | High-stakes situations, significant assets | Costs money; requires everyone to agree |
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One Reframe That Changes Everything
The guide makes a point that is genuinely underrated. The reason most adult children do not start the money conversation with parents is not ignorance – it is fear of seeming greedy. Nobody wants their parent to think they are asking about inheritance because they want the money.
The reframe that works: position the conversation as being about preparedness, not inheritance. You are not asking what you will get. You are asking what you would need to know to help them if something happened. That is a completely different emotional framing – and parents respond to it differently.
You could say: I read something this week about how many families end up in financial chaos during a health crisis just because they did not talk beforehand. I do not want that for us. Can we just talk through the basics? That is it. You have started.
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The Conversation Does Not Have to Be Perfect – It Just Has to Happen
This is not easy. But what the guide makes clear is that the cost of not talking is almost always higher than the awkwardness of talking.
The families who handle ageing, illness, and loss the best are not necessarily the richest or the most financially sophisticated. They are the ones who had the uncomfortable conversations early, imperfectly, and often. That is actually doable. And the interactive tool below is a good place to start figuring out your specific first step.
Last updated: May 17, 2026