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AI-generated image of woman in foreground as family members argue outside vacation home

My family inherited a vacation property, but nobody can agree how to use it. Should we just sell it, or is there a better option?

Discover the best options for inherited vacation properties when family members disagree. Learn about buyouts, co-ownership agreements, rentals, tax implications, partition actions, and when selling may be the smartest financial decision.
June 23, 2026 Peter Kinney
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A relative named me executor of their estate, and I had no idea how much responsibility it involved. What should I do?

Being named executor can feel like a big honor at first. Then you realize it comes with paperwork, deadlines, family questions, bank calls, court forms, taxes, and a whole lot of responsibility. The good news is that you do not have to magically know how to do everything right away.
June 23, 2026 J. Clarke
man with lots of rolled coins at bank

I have almost $5,000 in rolled change sitting in my basement. If I cash them in, will the IRS question where it came from? Could I get in trouble?

Most people have a jar of spare change somewhere. You took things a little further. Over the years, loose coins turned into rolls, the rolls turned into boxes, and now there's nearly $5,000 sitting in your basement. It sounds harmless enough—until you start wondering what happens when you finally try to turn all that metal into money. Could a giant pile of change raise questions you weren't expecting?
June 23, 2026 Jesse Singer
Worried woman holding apartment keys

I finally broke up with my boyfriend, but my landlord refuses to remove me from our lease. Now I can’t rent anywhere else. Is that legal? What do I do?

I broke up with my boyfriend. I want out. But both our names are on the lease. My landlord won’t remove me—and now I can’t get approved elsewhere because I’m “already on a lease.” Am I financially trapped? Here’s what’s actually happening—and what you can realistically do.
February 20, 2026 Jesse Singer
Older man bank setting

I don't trust banks and I want to close all my accounts and take my money. But can I still have a credit card without a bank account?

So you're thinking about doing something most people never seriously consider: closing every bank account you have and taking your money elsewhere. But if you make that leap, can you still have a credit card if you don't have a bank account? The answer might surprise you...
June 22, 2026 Jesse Singer
Confused couple with HOA notice

The HOA approved my renovation, but now says it violates updated rules. Can approvals be reversed after work begins?

You got the approval and did the paperwork. You hired contractors and maybe even lived through the noise and mess. Now, out of nowhere, the HOA tells you the renovation violates updated rules and needs to change or stop.
February 16, 2026 Quinn Mercer
Woman worried about renovations

I want to renovate our kitchen before selling to increase the home’s value, but my husband says we won’t recoup the cost. Is he right?

You’re about to sell, and your instinct is clear: update the kitchen, boost the value, sell for more. Your partner, on the other hand, says you’ll spend a fortune and never get it back. So, who’s right?
February 25, 2026 Quinn Mercer
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My husband keeps buying expensive watches and calling them "hard assets." Is that really investing, or rationalizing spending?

Luxury watches have a seductive story attached to them. They are tangible, portable, beautifully made, and in some cases they do hold value better than many other consumer goods. But if your husband is calling every pricey watch purchase an investment, the real answer is more complicated than that sales pitch suggests.
June 22, 2026 Miles Brucker
Woman concerned about pay app

I was tricked into sending money through an app, but my bank won’t dispute the charge because I “authorized” it. Is there any way to get my money back?

You didn’t get hacked. You didn’t have your card stolen. You sent the money yourself, because someone convinced you to. Now the bank says the charge was authorized, so there’s nothing they can do. Unfortunately, this is one of the hardest types of fraud to reverse, but “hard” doesn’t mean “impossible”.
February 25, 2026 Peter Kinney
Concerned woman on a cozy couch

The landlord says I’m competing with other applicants and have to pay to hold the unit. How do I avoid getting scammed?

You finally find a place that looks perfect, the landlord responds quickly, but then the pressure starts: “Other applicants are interested. If you want it, you need to pay a deposit to hold the unit.” This is exactly how rental scams work. The good news is you can protect yourself without losing every decent listing, as long as you know what to look for and how to slow the situation down.
February 10, 2026 Quinn Mercer
Boss says employees should be grateful for flexible hours

My boss says we're lucky to get such flexible hours so employees shouldn't expect raises. Is that becoming the new excuse?

If your boss says flexible hours are a reason to stop asking for a raise, you are not imagining a new workplace script. In the past few years, flexibility has become one of the most prized job benefits in the United States. The catch is that some employers now talk about it like it can replace cash, even while workers are still dealing with higher prices.
June 19, 2026 Miles Brucker
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My father wants me to guarantee his retirement home fees because he doesn't trust the contract. Could I end up on the hook for everything?

If your father asks you to guarantee his retirement home fees, it can sound like a simple family favor. In reality, that signature can expose you to a very large financial risk. The key issue is whether you are being asked to act as a true guarantor, because that can make you legally responsible for unpaid fees.
June 19, 2026 Carl Wyndham