DEAR SOMEONE ELSE’S MOM: Our youngest son still lives at home with my wife and me. He pays us rent and helps around the house whenever we need him to, so no complaints there. He saved up for a new car and decided to go with a Chevy EV. It’s a nice little SUV, but now he wants to put in a charging station here at our house. He knows we need a heavy up of our old house’s original electrical panel. He told us he would cover all the costs of the charger itself, including running a 240 outlet line out to the garage so he can put the charger in there. He said he was willing to cover half the cost of the heavy up, saying we would also benefit from the upgrade and we would have to probably do one anyway before we could sell our house if we decided to in the future.
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I think it is a reasonable proposal, but my wife thinks if he wants the charger he needs to pay for everything that goes with it, including the full cost of the heavy up. She is also not thrilled with having a lithium battery being parked and recharged in our attached garage.
I can see points in what they each have to say, but how do we break the tie? I don’t want to be the one to do it. --- CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE
DEAR CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE: The question that first comes to my mind is whether or not you had any intention of upgrading your electrical panel anytime soon. If not, then while I see your son’s point about mutual benefit, if you hadn’t planned for or budgeted for the expense right now, it’s an improvement that primarily only serves his purpose.
I think the three of you need to sit down and weigh the liabilities against the gains involved in your son’s scheme beyond the initial costs, including reasonable safety issues, and the inevitably higher electric bills and who’ll be responsible for those.
After covering all sides of your son’s proposal, if your wife doesn’t change her mind, then I’m afraid you’re stuck being the tiebreaker. At least you’ll hopefully have enough information to make a sound decision.