Son refuses to sell his inherited home at a 20% discount for a family “friend” his mom hasn’t spoken to in 20 years: ‘She asked why I wouldn’t be generous and charitable, I am not wealthy. I am a teacher.. I have been poor my entire life’

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  • AITAH for not wanting to sell an inherited home at a huge discount?

    Confused male teacher holding a pen in front of a chalkboard with circuit diagrams, while an older woman outlined in red leans in with a puzzled expression.
  • Note: I am going to try my best to avoid charged/loaded language here, as I am genuinely interested in objective takes on this scenario.
  • I am autistic, so I am worried my read on the situation might be "off" because of that.
  • Background: I (35- 40m) have recently inherited my grandparents' small 2-bedroom home in the rural U.S., one of the lowest cost-of- living locations in the country.
  • This is the home my mother spent many years of her life in, basically her entire teens.
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  • My grandparents continued to live there throughout the 80s, 90s, 00s, and 10s, up until my grandmother was placed into a supervised living facility.
  • For the past 4-5 years we have allowed a family to live there as caretakers, maintaining the home in exchange for no rent whatsoever.
  • The home was deeded to me about a year into the arrangement, and the family knew the situation wasn't permanent.
  • In early 2024, I notified the family that I would be listing the home in 2025.
  • They understood, and I received little pushback. They were grateful for the 4-5 years of relatively free housing, and they had their things packed and moved by my deadline with no conflict at all.
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  • The conflict has since arrived with my mother. She recently asked me if I was going to sell it for the low price it was appraised for in 2022 (after I took ownership, we had an appraisal).
  • I informed her that I probably wasn't going to because a lot has changed since then, and I feel like it would be smart and fair to get an updated value.
  • She seemed upset by this answer, and mentioned that an old family friend (someone we haven't spoken to in 20+ years) had reached out to her on social media to ask about purchasing the property.
  • When she shared that appraisal value, the person said it was out of their budget. That's when my mother began explaining to me her opinion that this is an opportunity to show generosity and a giving spirit by helping someone out in a time of need.
  • Rather than get an accurate appraisal and sell to an unknown buyer for market value, she suggested I sell at about a 20% markdown to this former family friend.
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  • When I asked her why I should even consider doing that, she simply stated that their family has been in the area for a long time and maybe they're trying to be better.
  • For context, this family-including the very person referenced, has a long history of property crime and drug-related arrests in the area.
  • I'm not suggesting that means their entire family is full of awful, horrible people. But I am stating outright that their presence has not been a net- positive.
  • She asked why I wouldn't consider being generous and charitable, given the opportunity, and I explained my position.
  • I feel like I have been quite generous and charitable for the past 4-5 years, allowing a struggling family to live there.
  • If I sold to ANYONE at a discount, it would have been them. Secondly, I am not wealthy.
  • I am a teacher, and my wife is disabled and only capable of working a small number of hours per week-which she does and is great at.
  • I have been poor my entire life. My mother was also poor until she married into wealth about ten years ago.
  • When I tried to explain that our capability to extend charity is very different, I was told that I'm not being considerate or grateful for the opportunity.
  • My plan is to sell this house and leave the state to teach elsewhere in a community that better aligns with my ideals and career goals.
  • Rural America is not great for me when it comes to either of those things. On one hand, I understand I did not purchase nor build this home.
  • It is entirely "free" to me. But I take issue with the idea that I should forego a realistic opportunity to improve my own family's future and security just for the feels.
  • I regularly engage in philanthropy at a budget that is bearable to me. But I have less than $50,000 annual household income.
  • The amount she considers trivial is quite literally more than half of my annual salary, and it isn't trivial to me at all.
  • I don't feel like I'm being an asshole in this exchange, but I can't help but question it, given the way this phone call played out.
  • So am I an autistic asshole yet again, or is my mom being unreasonable about this?
  • NTA teresajs If generosity is so important to your mother, she's welcome to offer to find the difference out of her own pocket.
  • OP Gary BuseylsLord I offered that solution, as well.
  • celticmusebooks NTA and if your mom is so "high" on charity she should buy the house at market value and resell to her friends. If I read your post correctly the house will appraise higher now than when you took it over-- and they said that the previous appraised price was outside of their budget. So she wants you to discount the already below market price. Is that correct? My money is on them not being able to get a loan and you'll either be expected to cosign or do some wacky under the table l
  • OP Gary BuseylsLord That is correct.
  • maski360 Inheritances and money are such great ways to tear families apart. I agree something smells funny here beyond Mom feeling like she has some say in the future of her childhood home. There are a couple of possibilities: 1. She feels slighted, so if she doesn't benefit from the sale of the house, her son shouldn't either. 2. As u/vwscienceandart says, she doesn't want "the neighborhood to change" and thus wants to control who lives in the house next. 3. She has a relationship with drug hea
  • OP Gary BuseylsLord I have a PhD, so they don't really try to suggest things like that to me very often (that I don't "get it"). That was more of my own consideration as a measure of thoroughness.
  • 0101001 NTA. As mentioned by others, you can offer to sell the home at its current FMV to your mother who can then sell the home at a discount to the family. Alternatively, you can get the home appraised, sell it to the family at a discounted rate and have your mom pay you the difference, which she should do from the generosity of her heart to a family she deems is in need. You don't need to explain yourself. You aren't wealthy, you don't have the privilege of the kind of generosity your mom is
  • OP Gary BuseylsLord I found the request to be batshit insane, as well.
  • axc199stang These people are not family friends. Let's make that clear. He is a low class moocher trying to get a house on the cheap using past connections out of greed.
  • OP Gary BuseylsLord That is my assessment, as well.
  • MissionHoneydew2209 It's gracious of your mother to offer her home to these struggling people. Oh.... wait. She offered YOUR home? Screw THAT. There's a reason you grandparents left this home to you. They wanted you to thrive - so go do that with a 100% clear conscience. NTA, in any way shape or form. Your mom is a giant one for pressuring you into giving away your chance to better your family's life, and get the hell out of Mayberry, RFD.
  • thedoodely Actually, someone you haven't contacted in 2 decades coming up to you to buy a property like that out of nowhere smells an awful lot like a flipper.
  • GroovyYaYa Appraisal doesn't always match sales price either!! You are looking for a market value estimate don't necessarily hire an appraiser, get a real estate agency. They will know what the MARKET is right now. You could be gifting much much more if you went through with it. As you said, it would be one thing to sell it to the people who had been living there, essentially rent free. It would be very easy to sell "as is" saving on some closing costs, etc. as presumably they'd be aware of any
  • jittarao NTA. Your mom's preaching generosity with your assets and your future security, not hers. Tell her: "If you believe in this so strongly, you're welcome to buy the home from me at current market value and then give your friend the discount yourself. That's real generosity. Otherwise, I'm selling it for what it's worth." If double property sales tax is a concern where you live, she can always pay you the difference directly. You already gave 4-5 years of free housing. That's more than gen
  • Neat-Client9305 I, in general, am not impressed with people who are generous with other people's belongings. Your mother needs to mind her own business

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