We're all just walking each other home.

When You Disagree With How Your Grandchildren Are Being Raised

TL;DR

Most grandparent estrangements start with small, repeated moments of criticism - not dramatic conflicts. Learn the 4 types of parenting disagreements and a practical framework for staying connected even when you disagree.

Every grandparent faces this moment. You’re watching your grandchildren being raised in ways that feel wrong – too permissive, too strict, too screen-heavy, too different from what you know worked. Your instinct is to speak up, to share your decades of hard-won wisdom, to protect the grandchildren you love.

But how you handle these moments determines whether you stay connected or get pushed out.

Disagreeing with your grandchildren’s parents is inevitable. Handling it well is a choice.

Why This Is the Hardest Part of Modern Grandparenting

You raised children. You made mistakes, learned from them, and developed genuine expertise. Now you’re watching a new generation of parents navigate challenges – and sometimes you can see clearly what they can’t. That perspective is valuable. But there’s a critical difference between having wisdom and knowing when and how to share it.

The hard truth? Most grandparent-grandchild estrangements don’t start with a dramatic falling out. They start with small, repeated moments where parents felt criticized, undermined, or disrespected. One comment too many. One eye roll too visible. One “well, in my day…” too often.

Your wisdom only helps if it’s received. And it’s only received when trust exists.

The Four Types of Disagreements (And How to Handle Each)

1. Safety Issues – Speak Up Immediately

Some disagreements aren’t about preference – they’re about safety. Car seat installation, medication doses, supervision around water, dangerous household hazards – these require immediate, direct conversation regardless of how it’s received.

How to handle it:

  • Address it privately, calmly, and factually
  • Focus on the specific safety concern, not general parenting criticism
  • Say: “I noticed the car seat isn’t installed correctly – can we look at it together?”
  • Don’t frame it as criticism – frame it as concern

Safety issues are the one area where you must speak up, every time, without apology.

Grandparent observing grandchild play while respecting parent's supervision role

2. Health and Wellbeing Concerns – Choose Your Moment

You’re worried about too much sugar, not enough outdoor time, excessive screen use, or sleep schedules. These are legitimate concerns – but they’re also areas where parenting research and culture shift constantly. How to handle it:
  • Ask yourself: “Is this a safety issue or a preference issue?” If it’s preference, pause before speaking
  • Wait to be asked, or ask permission: “Can I share something I’ve been thinking about?”
  • Share once, clearly, and then let it go
  • Respect their final decision even if you disagree
  • Never raise the same concern repeatedly – once is wisdom, twice is nagging

3. Parenting Style Differences – Stay in Your Lane

Discipline approaches, educational choices, religious upbringing, dietary preferences, extracurricular activities – these are firmly in the parents’ domain. Your job here isn’t to agree or disagree. It’s to support. How to handle it:
  • Follow their rules in your home and theirs, without commentary
  • When grandchildren complain about parental rules, don’t validate the complaint – redirect: “Your parents love you and have good reasons for their decisions”
  • Find genuine things to appreciate about their approach and say them out loud
  • Remember: different doesn’t mean wrong

4. Values and Lifestyle Differences – Practice Grace

This is the deepest and most painful category. Religious differences, political views, lifestyle choices, relationship structures – areas where your core beliefs may conflict with how your grandchildren are being raised. How to handle it:
  • Recognize that your grandchildren will form their own values regardless of your intervention
  • Model your values through your own life, not lectures
  • Love your adult children and their partners unconditionally, even in disagreement
  • Ask yourself: “Is maintaining this relationship more important than winning this argument?” The answer is almost always yes
 

The Framework That Changes Everything

Before raising any concern with your grandchildren’s parents, run it through these four questions:
  • Is this about safety or preference? Safety always warrants discussion. Preference rarely does.
  • Have I been asked for my opinion? If not, consider staying quiet.
  • Am I sharing this once or repeatedly? Once is wisdom. More than once is control.
  • Can I accept their decision gracefully if they disagree? If not, you’re not ready to have the conversation.
This framework won’t eliminate disagreements – nothing will. But it will ensure that when you do speak up, you’re heard rather than dismissed.


What to Do When You’ve Already Said Too Much

Most grandparents reading this have already crossed some of these lines. You’ve offered advice that wasn’t welcome. You’ve repeated concerns that were ignored. You’ve let frustration show in front of the grandchildren.
Three generations of family laughing together showing healthy grandparent-parent-grandchild dynamic.

Here’s what to do:

  • Apologize specifically: “I’ve been too critical about your parenting choices. That wasn’t fair or respectful. I’m sorry.”
  • Ask what they need: “What would help rebuild trust between us?”
  • Change your behavior consistently: Apologies without changed behavior are just words
  • Give it time: Trust rebuilds slowly. Be patient with the process

The Bigger Picture

Your grandchildren are watching how you handle conflict with their parents. They’re learning whether disagreements destroy relationships or strengthen them. They’re absorbing your example of how to love people you don’t always agree with.

When you choose grace over being right, you give them something more valuable than any parenting opinion: you show them what unconditional family love actually looks like in practice.

The bridge to your grandchildren runs through their parents. Even when – especially when – you disagree.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • 1.How do you handle disagreements with your grandchildren's parents?

    Disagreements with grandchildren's parents are inevitable. The key is distinguishing between safety issues (which require immediate discussion), health concerns (which warrant one conversation), parenting style differences (which require respect), and values differences (which require grace). Use the four-question framework before speaking up: Is it safety or preference? Have I been asked? Am I sharing once or repeatedly? Can I accept their decision?

  • 2.What should you do if you disagree with how your grandchildren are being raised?

    First, determine the type of disagreement. Safety issues require immediate, private conversation. Health concerns warrant one respectful discussion. Parenting style and values differences require you to stay in your lane, follow their rules, and model your values through your own life rather than lectures. The goal is maintaining the relationship, not winning the argument.

  • 3.How do you tell your adult child you disagree with their parenting?

    Ask permission first: "Can I share something I've been thinking about?" Be specific and factual, not critical. Focus on the concern, not general parenting criticism. Share once, clearly, and then let it go. Never raise the same concern repeatedly - once is wisdom, twice is nagging. Most importantly, be prepared to accept their decision gracefully even if you disagree.

  • 4.What causes estrangement between grandparents and grandchildren?

    Most grandparent-grandchild estrangements don't start with dramatic conflicts - they start with small, repeated moments where parents felt criticized, undermined, or disrespected. One comment too many, one eye roll too visible, one "well, in my day" too often. The cumulative effect of feeling judged erodes trust and eventually leads to reduced access

  • 5.How do you rebuild trust with your adult children after being too critical?

    Apologize specifically for the behavior, not just the outcome. Ask what they need to rebuild trust. Change your behavior consistently - apologies without changed behavior are just words. Give it time - trust rebuilds slowly. Focus on showing unconditional love and respect for their parenting choices going forward.

  • 6.What is the difference between safety concerns and parenting preferences as a grandparent?

    Safety concerns involve immediate physical risk - car seat installation, medication doses, water supervision, dangerous hazards. These always warrant speaking up. Parenting preferences cover discipline styles, screen time, diet, education, and values - areas where parents have full authority. The key question to ask yourself: "Could a child be physically harmed if I stay quiet?" If yes, speak up. If no, consider staying in your lane.

About the Author

Neil Taft is a great-great-grandpa, author of 4 grandparenting books, and speaker dedicated to helping families build intentional connections across generations. With 80+ years of lived experience and nearly 500 published articles, he shares practical strategies that strengthen family bonds and create lasting legacies.

Learn More About Neil  |Explore His Books  |Book Neil to Speak