The grandparent generation: why paying matters so much
For many grandparents, the check isn’t about $87 or $150. It’s about something much bigger: generativity—the psychological need to invest in and nurture the next generation.
Psychologist Erik Erikson identified generativity as the central developmental challenge of middle and late adulthood. People who successfully navigate this stage find meaning in contributing to those who come after them. Paying for a family dinner is a small but tangible expression of this deeper need.
What they’re thinking”I worked my whole life so I could take my family out to dinner. Let me do this.”
What they’re feelingPride in being able to provide. Purpose in contributing. Fear of becoming a burden.
Research by Vern Bengtson at USC, spanning three generations over 35 years, found that grandparents who can provide tangible support to their families report higher life satisfaction than those who cannot—regardless of absolute wealth. It’s not about having money. It’s about using that money to maintain family bonds.
The fear of becoming a burden
There’s a shadow side to this dynamic. Many older adults worry intensely about becoming a financial or emotional burden on their children. Paying the restaurant bill is a way of demonstrating continued capability: I can still contribute. I’m not a drain on this family.
When children repeatedly refuse their parents’ generosity, they may inadvertently trigger this anxiety. A simple “Let me get this, Dad” can feel, to the grandparent, like a statement: “You can’t afford this anymore.”
The takeaway: Grandparents’ insistence on paying often comes from a deep psychological need to maintain their role in the family. Accepting their contribution gracefully—perhaps with a heartfelt “Thank you, that means a lot”—may be more respectful than fighting for the check.
Sources: Bengtson et al., “Beyond Intergenerational Ambivalence,” Journal of Marriage and Family (2002); Erikson, Childhood and Society (1950).