As of 2024, nearly one in five adults between 25 and 34 lives with parents or in-laws. And even after accounting for income, employment, education, and marriage, researchers found that local housing costs directly reduce the likelihood of young adults establishing independent households.
This isn’t just a social trend. It’s an affordability story. When housing consumes too much of income, it delays more than homeownership does. It delays household formation itself.
That changes everything.
- The first apartment.
- The starter home.
- Marriage.
- Raising children.
- Building equity.
- Building stability.
Housing affordability is no longer just shaping the market. It’s reshaping the timeline of adulthood.
And when housing drifts too far from what working families can afford, the consequences don’t stop at the market. They begin reshaping the American path into adulthood itself.
Read the original article here: What It Takes to Leave Parental Home


