There's selfless, and then there's this. A 70-year-old grandmother from Cleveland recently called into "The Ramsey Show" with a question that made the hosts pause: Should she sell her paid-off $425,000 condo to buy a house for her 19-year-old grandson?
The caller, Chris, adopted Jacob when he was young after a tough family situation left him needing stability. She raised him, gave him a home, and now he's 19, enrolled in an HVAC training program, and talking about moving out with his girlfriend. Chris lives on roughly $3,500 a month from Social Security and other income sources. She's finding the condo harder to manage and is wrestling with what to do: give it to Jacob, rent it to him, or sell it and buy him something else entirely.
Love Doesn't Require a Half-Million-Dollar Safety Net
"I want to make sure he's taken care of," Chris explained. At 70, she's thinking more seriously about mortality and what she'll leave behind.
Co-host John Delony got straight to it. "Are you asking if you should sell your home so that you can buy him a house?" he asked. Chris confirmed that's exactly what she was considering. Both Delony and co-host George Kamel immediately pushed back.
"You adopted him and saved him. He is where he is because of you," Delony said. "A half-million-dollar condo is not going to keep him from living with his girlfriend."
Kamel piled on with a dose of reality. "You gave him a safe place and showed him what love looked like. That is worth far more than you handing him a condo at 19, which no 19-year-old needs handed to them."
When Chris mentioned that Jacob could only afford about $800 a month in rent, Delony reminded her that figuring things out is literally what being a young adult is about. "This is a violation of your values," he said, referring to the idea of bankrolling a house just because her grandson wants independence.
The Real Risk: Enabling Instead of Empowering
Chris also shared that she's been thinking about moving into a senior living facility, something she could actually afford if she sold the condo. Delony supported that plan wholeheartedly, but urged her to consult a trusted financial advisor first to make sure the proceeds are managed wisely.
So what about Jacob? "He's turning into a grown man and he's in the HVAC world. He's going to make great money and he gets to figure that out for himself," Kamel said.
Then came the hard truth. Kamel warned that handing a teenager a major asset could do more harm than good. "You hand any 19-year-old any large asset or any large amount of money, they're going to squander it and screw it up. He'll sell it within the month," he said.
Instead, the hosts told Chris to focus on securing her own future. "The greatest gift you can give him is him not having to come pay your rent the last 10 years of your life," Delony said.
When Generosity Becomes a Trap
The conversation highlights a tension familiar to many families: How much help is actually helpful? Chris clearly loves her grandson deeply. She's already sacrificed enormously by adopting and raising him. But the hosts made a compelling case that true support sometimes means stepping back and letting young adults struggle a little, learn to budget, and build resilience.
Jacob is entering a skilled trade with strong earning potential. He doesn't need a house at 19. He needs the chance to earn one himself, to understand what it takes, and to develop the financial maturity that only comes from real-world experience.
Both Delony and Kamel praised Chris for her dedication and selflessness, but their message was clear: Her job as a parent is done. Now it's Jacob's turn to figure out the next chapter on his own terms, while Chris takes care of the person who's been taking care of everyone else—herself.