Shaquille O’Neal has once again talked about money and parenting after explaining why his children must earn three degrees before they can access his wealth.
During a recent appearance on the Impaulsive podcast, the NBA Hall of Famer spoke about the values he wants his children to learn and why he believes family wealth should come with responsibility. His comments offered a glimpse into the lessons he hopes will stay with his kids long after basketball.
Shaquille O’Neal explains his ‘respectable nepotism’ rule
During the podcast, Shaquille O’Neal shared the standards he has set for his children despite his enormous success.
“My kids are gated community gangsters yes,” O’Neal said. “They kinda got mad at this but I say, in order to touch Daddy’s cheese you gotta have three degrees because I believe in respectable nepotism.”
He then explained that education and hard work matter more to him than simply passing down money.
“I also have to teach my kids we’re not rich, I’m rich,” O’Neal said.
The former NBA star has spoken about this approach before. He has repeatedly said that his children should build their own careers and prove they are responsible before receiving financial help. While he is willing to support good business ideas, he does not believe in handing over wealth without effort.
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Shaquille O’Neal shares $250 million inheritance story
While explaining his point, O’Neal recalled a story that changed the way he viewed family wealth.
“I was with the Miami Heat one day and this article came out. The grandmother leaves the son $250,000,000. This kid’s on his knees scrubbing the bathroom floor and I’m looking at him. I’m like, hey man, didn’t your grandmother just leave you $250,000,000?,” he said.
According to O’Neal, the young man replied, “Yeah, but Dad wants me to start from the bottom. Once I saw that I was like, you know what, that right there is respectable nepotism.”
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O’Neal also used his own family as an example. In the podcast, he recalled his oldest son earning straight A’s and asking for a Tesla. Instead of agreeing immediately, O’Neal told him to look at Honda vehicles instead.
The story was another example of how he tries to teach his children the value of money rather than giving them everything they ask for. Over the years, he has repeatedly said that education comes first in his household.
The four-time NBA champion, who has earned multiple college degrees himself, has often explained that his children must show commitment, responsibility, and a strong work ethic before they can benefit from the wealth he has built.
