Cost of supporting children through Covid revealed

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The latest LV= Wealth and Wellbeing Monitor has found that 50% of parents with children aged 18+ have spent on average nearly £1,300 over three months supporting their children.

2% (377,000) of parents of children 18+ say they have spent more than £10,000.

Parents expressed their concerns over how the coronavirus pandemic is disrupting the education, finances and employment prospects of their children age 18+. To support them, they are paying for a variety of expenses such as rent (6%), petrol, mobile phones or food (18%), laptops or computers to enable children to work/ study from home (5%), or are letting them move back home (6%).

Older children (aged 30+) were less likely to receive support than those aged 18-30, but those older children that did receive help received a higher amount (as older children are likely to need support for bigger commitments such as house deposits and rent).

53% of mass affluent parents – those with assets of between £100,000 and £500,000 excluding property – with children 18+ are helping them financially. They have spent on average nearly £1,800 supporting their grown-up children. One in ten has spent £2,000 or more with 3% spending £10,000 or more. They are helping to pay for day-to-day expenses (19%), paying into their children’s savings account, ISAs or pensions (8%) and paying rent (8%).

Mass affluent parents of 18-30 year olds are more likely to be paying into a savings account/ ISA/ pension to help their child (15% vs. 6% of all parents of 18-30 year olds).

Meanwhile, 39% of parents of university-aged children (18-21) worry about their education being disrupted and 26% worry about the subsequent impact on their exams

Parents also worry about their 18-21 year olds’ mental health: 28% fear their children are feeling isolated or depressed

18-24-year-olds are more likely (36%) to feel isolated or lonely compared to the general population (26%)

Clive Bolton, managing director of savings and retirement at LV=, said: “The covid pandemic is disrupting the education, employment prospects and finances of many young adults. It’s striking to see how this is affecting their parents and many are digging deep into their pocket to support their children.

“Younger adults are one of the groups most affected by the economic impact of lockdowns and nearly half of those aged 18-34 say their finances are worse than they were three months ago. This means that parental support is the only way many young people can afford to pay for expensive items such as rent, running a car or even house deposits.

“LV=’s research shows that parents are particularly worried about their children’s university education being severely disrupted and the impact this will have on their exams and subsequent employment prospects. Parents of university-age children also worry about their children’s mental health and fear lockdown has left them lonely, isolated and depressed.

“They are doing things such as encouraging adult children to move back home to live rent-free, meeting their children’s day-to-day spending for items such as food, mobile phones and petrol and helping them with expensive item such as rent and house deposits.”

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