Getting siblings to help
Last reviewed: 17 July 2026
If you're reading this, there's a good chance you're the one who took the last call, booked the last appointment, or noticed the fridge was empty before anyone else did. Somewhere along the way, "helping out" became "the one who does it" — and it's often not a decision anyone actually made. It just happened, and it kept happening.
This page isn't about blame. Most siblings who aren't helping aren't villains — they're often avoiding, distracted, unsure what's needed, or quietly assuming someone else has it covered. The goal here is to help you ask clearly, divide things fairly, and know what to do when asking isn't enough.
Why this happens
A few patterns show up again and again in families sharing care:
- Proximity did the deciding. Whoever lives closest, or was around at the moment things got harder, tends to absorb the role by default — not by agreement.
- Nobody named it as a job. Care creeps up gradually. There was never a conversation where the family sat down and said "this now needs to be shared" — so no one siblings ever formally opted in or out.
- Avoidance feels easier than admitting fear. Some siblings stay away because watching a parent decline is painful, not because they don't care. Distance can be a way of coping, even when it lands on you as absence.
- Old family roles resurface. The "responsible one," the "one who moved away," the "one who never had to grow up" — birth order and old dynamics often quietly reassert themselves under stress.
- Money and fairness get tangled up. Resentment about who's helping now can mix with older, unrelated resentments about inheritance, past favours, or who got more support growing up. It's worth noticing when a conversation about care duties is actually about something else.
Naming the pattern out loud — even just to yourself — can take some of the heat out of it. "It looks like this fell to me because I live closest, not because I offered" is a very different starting point to a conversation than "nobody else cares as much as I do."
How to start the conversation
The instinct is often to wait until you're at breaking point, and then it comes out as an accusation. A better result usually comes from raising it earlier and more calmly.
- Ask for a proper conversation, not a passing comment. "Can we get 20 minutes this week to talk through how we're splitting things for Mam" lands very differently to bringing it up mid-argument or in a group text.
- Lead with the facts, not the feeling — at first. "I'm doing the GP appointments, the shopping, and most of the calls at the moment" is harder to dismiss than "I do everything and nobody helps."
- Ask, don't assign. "What could you realistically take on?" invites a real answer. "You need to start doing X" invites defensiveness.
- Make it easy to say yes to something small. A sibling who won't commit to "helping more" might commit to "ringing Mam every Tuesday evening" or "handling the pharmacy prescriptions." Specific and bounded beats vague and open-ended.
- Put it in writing afterwards. A short follow-up message — "great, so you've got Tuesday calls and the dentist, I've got the rest" — turns a conversation into something people can be held to, gently.
Dividing tasks so it isn't just about hours
"Splitting things evenly" rarely means splitting hours evenly — someone nearby will always do more hands-on work than someone two hours away. It works better to split by type of task, so everyone has a real role even if the load isn't identical.
- Hands-on care. Visits, meals, personal care, transport to appointments — usually falls to whoever lives closest, but can be rotated on weekends or covered by paid support if funds allow.
- Admin and entitlements. Applying for supports, tracking appointments, dealing with the HSE or a GP surgery, keeping a folder of documents. This can be done remotely and suits a sibling who isn't nearby but is organised.
- Financial. Paying bills, monitoring an account, contributing directly to costs, or covering things like grocery deliveries or a cleaner. A sibling with more disposable income but less time can contribute meaningfully here.
- Emotional check-ins. A regular phone call isn't "less than" a visit — for someone who's lonely, it may matter just as much. This is a real task, worth naming as one, not treated as the default filler for whoever can't do the rest.
- Research and problem-solving. Someone has to figure out what support actually exists, compare options, and make phone calls to services. This can be split off as its own job, especially for a sibling who's good at that kind of thing but not close by.
A simple rule that helps: everyone has at least one task with their name on it, and it's written down somewhere all of you can see — not just held in your head.
When a sibling won't engage
Sometimes a calm, specific ask still doesn't land. A few things worth trying before you conclude that nothing will change:
- Separate "won't" from "can't." A sibling dealing with their own health crisis, young children, or financial strain may genuinely not have capacity right now, even if they care. That doesn't mean the imbalance is fine — but it changes what a fair ask looks like.
- Try a smaller ask before writing them off. If "help more" hasn't worked, try one specific, low-effort task with a clear end point — "can you just handle renewing her medical card this month."
- Give it a deadline, not an ultimatum. "Let's check back in a month and see how the split is working" keeps the door open without demanding an instant personality change.
- Protect yourself regardless of their answer. You can't force a sibling to show up. What you can do is stop absorbing tasks silently, get clear on what support you need from outside the family, and stop waiting for a fairness that may not arrive before you act.
When outside help makes sense
Not every family can resolve this alone, and that's not a failure. A few routes worth knowing about:
- A GP or medical social worker. If the standoff is affecting your relative's care or wellbeing, a GP can sometimes raise it directly, and a medical social worker attached to a hospital or primary care team can help coordinate what different family members are responsible for.
- Family mediation services. Where the conflict has become personal rather than practical, a professional, neutral mediator can help siblings agree a plan without it turning into a rehash of every old grievance. The Family Mediation Service (part of the Legal Aid Board, free of charge) covers family disputes more broadly and can be worth exploring if talking it out yourselves keeps breaking down.
- Family Carers Ireland. Their National Freephone Careline is staffed by people used to exactly this kind of situation — not just entitlements, but the family dynamics around care. It's a reasonable place to talk it through before it boils over. See their Help & Guidance page.
For a wider view of the supports and services available to you as a carer, see where to get help. And if what's prompting all this is a change you've noticed in your relative rather than a family dynamic, our signs it's time to step in page may be a more useful starting point. If carrying most of this alone is starting to wear on you, see wellbeing and burnout for the secondary carer too.
You don't need your siblings to feel exactly as responsible as you do. You need a plan that doesn't depend on you carrying it all — and that's something you can build, one clear conversation at a time.