What started as a helping hand quickly turned into something much more complicated for one couple trying to buy a home.
Lacey, a caller from Seattle, said on the recent “The Ramsey Show” that her in-laws helped with a $300,000 down payment, but the strings attached have created tension, financial stress, and constant interference.
She and her husband thought they were getting a boost into homeownership. Instead, they found themselves stuck in a deal that feels less like family support and more like a business arrangement.
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According to Lacey, her husband’s parents structured the down payment in a way that requires repayment when the house is sold, along with a percentage of any future profit. On top of that, the home is in the parents’ name, not the couple’s.
“They kind of use it as a business transaction with their kids,” Lacey said, adding that the same setup was also used with her husband’s sister.
Now, the couple is also dealing with ongoing financial advice from the in-laws, which Lacey described as unsolicited.
Personal finance expert Dave Ramsey was taken aback.
“I don’t know why they would have any,” he said, regarding the in-laws giving them unsolicited financial advice.
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Ramsey also described the arrangement as more than just a bad deal; he called it “a nightmare.”
“There’s nothing good about this,” he said. “This is such a dysfunctional mess. The last thing I want to do with my kids is to put this many wedges in between me and them.”
Ramsey suggested the underlying issue goes beyond money. The parents, he said, used the house as a way to keep the couple nearby, creating a dynamic where financial support comes with personal influence.
Ramsey warned that if nothing changes, the situation could result in serious consequences. “What’s going to end up happening is this is going to end up in divorce or bankruptcy or both,” he said.
The home cost about $800,000. The parents contributed $300,000, while Lacey and her husband took on a mortgage for the remaining balance. Their combined income is around $80,000 a year.
Ramsey quickly pointed out the mismatch.
“You bought a house you can’t afford,” he said, adding that their housing costs take up a large portion of their income.
