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Parents Increasingly Move Back In With Their Kids, What’s Going On?

Pew discusses the Demographics of Multigenerational Households.

The number of Americans who live in multigenerational family households is about four times larger than it was in the 1970s, while the number in other types of homes grew by far less. The share of the U.S. population living in multigenerational homes more than doubled over the past five decades.

After declining in earlier decades, multigenerational living has grown steadily in the U.S. since the 1970s. From 1971 to 2021, the number of people living in multigenerational households quadrupled, while the number in other types of living situations is less than double what it was. The share of the U.S. population in multigenerational homes has more than doubled, from 7% in 1971 to 18% in 2021.

Multigenerational living is growing in part because groups that account for most recent overall population growth in the U.S., including foreign-born, Asian2, Black and Hispanic Americans, are more likely to live with multiple generations under one roof. Thus, the rise in the multigenerational family household population is linked to the changing makeup of the overall U.S. population. However, multigenerational living also is rising among non-Hispanic White Americans, who accounted for a higher share of the multigenerational household population growth from 2000 to 2021 (28%) than of total population growth (9%).

Among major racial and ethnic groups, Americans who are Asian, Black or Hispanic are more likely than those who are White to live in a multigenerational family household.

About a quarter of Asian (24%), Black (26%) and Hispanic (26%) Americans lived in multigenerational households in 2021, compared with 13% of those who are White. 

Since 2000, the multigenerational household population has grown by 22.1 million people, but some groups played a larger role than others in driving that change. Americans younger than 40 accounted for almost half (49%) of the increase in the multigenerational household population but only 17% of overall population growth. In general, young adults are marrying later and staying in school longer than previous generations, which may contribute to their rising inclination to live with other family members under one roof. 

Finances the Top Reason

PEW discusses the reasons in a separate article, Experiences of Adults in Multigenerational Households

There are a variety of reasons why adults live in multigenerational households, but financial considerations top the list. Many also say that this is just the arrangement they’ve always had or that caring for an adult family member or receiving care is a reason for their living arrangement. Relatively few say the reasons they live in a multigenerational household are related to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

For the most part, adults living in multigenerational households say this has been a positive experience, with at least half saying their arrangement is often convenient and rewarding. Still, about a quarter say living with other adult family members can be stressful all or most of the time, and this is particularly the case among adult children living with a parent.

The experiences of adults in multigenerational households often vary by income; and, among adult children living with a parent, by age. For example, those with lower incomes are more likely than those with middle and upper incomes to say there’s not enough space to live comfortably. Younger adults (ages 25 to 39) who are living with a parent are much more likely than those ages 40 and older to see financial benefits in the arrangement and much less likely to say they contribute anything toward the mortgage or rent in their household. 

Financial Stress and Demographics

Unsurprisingly, finances are a factor in 67 percent of these decisions. It’s a major factor in 40 percent of these arrangements. 

There are more households over time so the number of multigenerational households will also increase over time even if the percentages stay the same. 

However, PEW notes that non-Hispanic White Americans accounted for a higher share of the multigenerational household population growth from 2000 to 2021 (28%) than of total population growth (9%).

Judging from the cost of food and rent, it’s easy to understand the financial stress.

CPI Month-Over-Month Shelter 

CPI Data from BLS, chart by Mish

Shelter is nearly a third of the CPI. For discussion, please see CPI Accelerates 0.5 Percent in January, Up 6.4 Percent From a Year Ago.

How the Fed Messes With People’s Lives From a Mortgage Rate Perspective

For those looking to buy a home, prices are out of sight. Prices have barely started to decline but mortgage rates have more than doubled. 

Please see How the Fed Messes With People’s Lives From a Mortgage Rate Perspective for discussion.

Fifty Percent Say They Are Worse Off Than a Year Ago

Finally, Gallup reports Fifty Percent Say They Are Worse Off Than a Year Ago

Among lower-income workers, a massive 61 percent say they are worse off now than a year ago. 

Financial stress is on the rise.

Both PEW articles are about a year old. 

With rent and food prices soaring, and with mortgage rates making homes the most unaffordable in decades, I am sure PEW’s numbers are understated, perhaps by a lot.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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GruesomeHarvest
GruesomeHarvest
3 years ago
Multigenerational households sound like a good thing to me. Especially as Americans become poorer due to bad monetary and fiscal governance. The benefits of traditional multigenerational household include providing more meaning to the older generation as grandparents who look after the children, more efficient use of resources, and greater socializing and comradery.
Ultimately it was the government who benefited by having everyone in the work force.
MikeC711
MikeC711
3 years ago
Size of families is also a factor here. I spoke with my uncles years ago about their Pittsburgh neighborhood and how much building was going on when the population wasn’t growing very fast. They reminded me that most families 30 years ago four to seven children and now the number was more in the one to two range. So the homes that used to have eight people in them now have three people in them so you need about two and a half times as many homes for the same population. These relatively small households are also ripe for multi-generational consolidation. As a landlord, I am always looking for a maximum number of households, but we shall see how it all plays out
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  MikeC711
Think you can get another 500 a month when gramma moves in?
Six000mileyear
Six000mileyear
3 years ago
How much more data does the government need before calling a recession? 50% responding WORSE OFF is consistent with a recession. Continued trend of parents moving in with their kids signals reduced spending since economies of scale generally come with price breaks.
randocalrissian
randocalrissian
3 years ago
Reply to  Six000mileyear
GDP coming in 2.7% this morning is not going to argue your case. The R call can has been kicked a few months down the road, at least.
klausmkl
klausmkl
3 years ago
Families will ban together. They have no choice, it’s all about money. Many haven’t prepared for this new reality.
Avery
Avery
3 years ago
START HERE:
Largest senior living / assisted living: WELL, BKD … etc.
Then see who are the largest holders in each: Blackrock, Vanguard, State Street…
Why give money to them? Help their ESG and DIE scores by running the other way!
Yes, first generation and ethics had/have the multigenerational thing figured out.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
the post ww2 decades WAS THE ABERRATION. the 3rd base born boomers and their parents have no clue. i remember when my phoenix hood was imploding in price of homes in 2006 to 2012, i told my 3rd base pals, watch as intergenerational living takes hold. in the home i inhabited there was efficiency unit installed, in what was the porch, in the 1930s great depression. of course i was correct. loser kids came back to parents with their kids in tow. and guess what. they were all happier and better off. amerikans are so fat and dumb and rich they have no clue. i live in a hood in brooklyn with haitian and jamaican and african folks. every single house has 3 generations. happy folks. savings rates high. i don’t have a car. i walk. rich 3rd base fat phucks have autos and think they are poor. god bless the middlebrows. they give me endless laughs. so dumb.
jiminy
jiminy
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
I was born in 1945, I grew up in a multigen house as did most people. WW2 forced service for males and the depression made most people poor, resulting a slow grind out of poverty for the post war generation.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Grandma has a place to live and the parents get free day care. Has worked this way forever. I think in the black community it’s more common for kids to be raised by their grandparents than their parents.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
This is also the reason for most homeless people becoming homeless: finances. The drug and mental health issues are often exasperated, if not caused outright, by the trauma incurred as a result of the disgusting nature of people, usually authority figures, towards those in need. In short, the slaves desire to be enslaved creates a hell out of paradise. Rent high? Why so many homeless? Oh, they’re on drugs or crazy. Couldn’t possibly be because they don’t make enough money no matter how hard they work.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
Hippy, life has always been a bitch when you haven’t learned any marketable skills.
Perhaps you were born into wealth?
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
Not hardly. Being an observer of human behavior really has no relation to any marketable skills. Those who choose to embrace ignorance do get what they sow, but this system also exacerbates any weaknesses in the unconnected population. When you look at the parasites, pay close attention to those who truly profit from the dysfunctional nature of our culture. Those food stamps and Obama phone users aren’t the true welfare class. It’s the corporations that land those sweet pork contracts. The main flaw the majority of the people posses is they trust the state to educate their children. Creating educated minds that can think critically and create opportunities for themselves is not in the state’s interest. Instead, the state focuses on useless knowledge and teaching kids how to be subservient to authority figures as they learn how to be cannon fodder and prison inmates. And that’s why they all support the teacher unions so much. Mini rant on a slice of a subject so obvious and disgusting yet the slaves refuse to see.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
Excellent, to the point, rant. Kudos.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
Just to continue my little rant, I’d like to point out that in my area, the marketable skills that pay well are not marketable here. Unless you think that being a bullet head prison guard or government flunky of a similar nature requires some special genius. The powers that cower here do not want the competition. The overwhelming majority of jobs here, outside of government, are low paying service jobs. This is intentional.
I grew up poor, but blessed with gifts that I cultivated. The poor do bear the brunt of the blame for their individual situation, but the state has done its best to ensure their poverty has no end. The same goes for the karens of the middle class. The state encourages their fear of poor people. Basically, the state thrives on our divisions and poverty. This is the inevitable result of giving up your ability to rule yourself to anyone who comes along. Much less the morons that makes up our government leadership. Biden’s dementia, and Wilson’s stroke as well, prove you don’t even need a brain to be president. And so I’ll end my old man shaking his fist at the sky rant.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
Another good rant.
At the very least we are both continuing to shake our fists.
Personally I think the American Dream of home ownership was created in part to keep the folks tied down and prevent them from easily migrating all over the place in search of better conditions.
I only mentioned skills because they typically can provide food and shelter for those that need it.
Matt3
Matt3
3 years ago
I do think this is a trend. I had my home on the market about a year ago and was told that it would likely go to a family arrangement like this. I ending up staying where I am but a lot of the homes in my neighborhood are multigenerational. Large homes that have plenty of room.
It actually makes sense both financially and from a family aspect. Maybe this will be the best way to retire and stay connected.
Carl_R
Carl_R
3 years ago
Rather than viewing this rise as unusual, perhaps it is better to view it as a return to normal. Historically, this is the way it was, but between 1933 and 1971 the rate was abnormally low.

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