AARP: 33% Of 18-49-year-olds Live With Parents Or
In-Laws
March
9, 2009
With Americans of all ages
feeling the effects of the economic crisis and the plummeting housing market,
mutigenerational households may become more prevalent in the coming years. AARP
Bulletin, the go-to news source for 50+ America, recently released the
results of an exclusive new survey that looks at housing trends and how the
economy may be impacting adults living situations. More than 1,000 people age
18 and older were surveyed about who they live with, how likely it is that they
will need to move in with another family member or friend, and how comfortable
they would be living with additional friends or family members if that would
become necessary.
The results show a direct
relation between a loss of income and young adults who are moving back home
with their parents after a period of independence. Additional key findings
include:
Multigenerational Housing: 11% of people age 50+ live
with their grandchildren or their parents.
Boomerang Adults: 11% of people age 35-44
report living with their parents or their in-laws.
Why People Move: 34% of people who said
that they would likely have to move in with family or friends said that it
would be due to a loss of income.
The recession is having an
impact on people of all ages, and the effects are starting to be felt at home,
said Jim Toedtman, Vice President and Editor of AARP
Bulletin. We see more people living under the same roof as their parents and
their adult children. As Americans face tougher economic conditions, well
likely see more of this.
Results of AARP
Bulletins Multigenerational Housing survey suggest that as jobs continue
to disappear and the foreclosure crisis continues,
millions of 50+ Americans will be living with their adult children and
grandchildren in multigenerational homes.
Multigenerational Housing
and Boomerang Adults
The survey found that that
4% of people age 50+ are currently living with their grandchildren. Results
also showed 33% of respondents age 18-49 live with parents or in-laws. A
further analysis of this group showed 11% of respondents age 35-44 live with
parents or in-laws. Of those respondents, 9% report living with their parents
and 2% reporting living with their in-laws.
Likelihood of Moving in
With Others
When asked how likely it is
that they may need to move in with family members or friends or have family
members or friends move in with them, 15% said that it was likely. Among those
who thought it would be likely, the largest percentage about one-third (34%)
said it would be due to a loss of income, 19% said that it would be due to a
change in job status and 8% cited home foreclosure as the reason.
Results also showed that
respondents between 18 and 34 are more likely than older respondents to have
already made such a move (20% vs. 9% for those age 35-44; 8% for those 45-54;
9% for those 55-64; and 7% for those 65+).
Comfort in Living with
Additional Friends or Family Members
Roughly one in seven (14%)
respondents said they would not be very comfortable, and nearly three in
ten (29%) would not be at all comfortable living with additional friends
or family members. In contrast, 14% said they would be extremely
comfortable and 14% said they would be very comfortable if
such a change in housing became necessary. More than a quarter (27%) of
respondents said they would be somewhat comfortable with such an
arrangement.
Additional information can
be found in the March 2009 issue of AARP Bulletin at http://www.aarp.org/research/housing-mobility/affordability/multigen_housing.html.
AARP Bulletins
Multigenerational Housing Survey was conducted by International Communications
Research, Inc. (ICR) in January 2009. A short telephone survey among a
nationally representative sample of adults ages 18 and older was taken to learn
more about housing patterns and their options about how their own housing
situation may change in the next year. The total sample consisted of 1,002
adults who are 18 and older.
Source: AARP/PRNewswire