ChatterBank0 min ago
Mother needs to move in with us in a few years
13 Answers
My father died two and a half years ago, and my mother lives on her own - she's 76 and in good health and I am an only child. We accept that at some point she will have to move in with us, but the house will need some work. We barely have the money to do repairs ourselves, but she owns her house outright and has a good pension thanks to my father.
Where would we stand legally if she paid for us to extend and improve the house, using her own place as collateral? I'm not sure how this would work so any suggestions would also be helpful. She has made her will and I will be the sole beneficiary - so anything she has will come to me in the end. She has an insurance policy that would cover her should she ever need to go into fulltime care - it's expensive but I understand if she stops paying she won't get anything back. Her mother lived into her nineties so despite a weak chest we are not expecting her to be departing this life any time soon.
Where would we stand legally if she paid for us to extend and improve the house, using her own place as collateral? I'm not sure how this would work so any suggestions would also be helpful. She has made her will and I will be the sole beneficiary - so anything she has will come to me in the end. She has an insurance policy that would cover her should she ever need to go into fulltime care - it's expensive but I understand if she stops paying she won't get anything back. Her mother lived into her nineties so despite a weak chest we are not expecting her to be departing this life any time soon.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You need to identify exactly what you need to do/would like to do in your own house in order to accommodate your mother now and in the future.
Get firm prices from reputable builders as to how much this will cost.
You may have a better idea of your options once you have this figure to hand; perhaps a guaranteed loan, an equity release scheme, etc.
Get firm prices from reputable builders as to how much this will cost.
You may have a better idea of your options once you have this figure to hand; perhaps a guaranteed loan, an equity release scheme, etc.
The money isn' t really the issue - our legal standing is more on my mind - does it affect ownership of the property if she has paid for it to be extended? And might the house be in danger if she has to go into care and her insurance policy doesn't pay out? We are thinking of the future - at the moment she can manage on her own, and we are enjoying some alone time. I love her dearly but having her around 24/7 would drive me mad - she's not a very independant person and relies on us to get her around as it is, despite being quite capable of getting on a bus! We are thinking of about 5 years or so. She is more or less happy where she is, as that's where she and Dad lived and she has neighbours who are friendly and helpful, wheras we are quite isolated and we would be in each others' pockets.
The only property taken into consideration were she to go into residential care would be a property which 'she' owns...........She can sell her house, give you *all* the money to extend your home and it won't have any impact whatsoever on yours.
Is it possible to extend your property so that although she lives with you, she can live quite separately ?
Is it possible to extend your property so that although she lives with you, she can live quite separately ?
Thanks for that, Jack - it's what I was looking for, although we will look into it in more detail, I just wanted to know if there was anything in our way as it were.
It's a possibility to extend as you say, it's early days. At the moment we are looking at external space, and internal space is negotiable.
It's a possibility to extend as you say, it's early days. At the moment we are looking at external space, and internal space is negotiable.