These days, housing affordability is a struggle for nearly everyone.

But for young adults just starting out, soaring home prices and sky-high rents have become one of the greatest obstacles to making it on their own.

Nearly one-third, or 31%, of Generation Z adults live at home with parents because they can’t afford to buy or rent their own space, according to a recent report by Intuit Credit Karma that polled 1,249 people age 18 and older. Gen Z is generally defined as those born between 1996 and 2012, including a cohort of teens and tweens.

“The current housing market has many Americans making adjustments to their living situations, including relocating to less-expensive cities and even moving back in with their families,” said Courtney Alev, Intuit Credit Karma’s consumer financial advocate.

Overall, the number of households with two or more adult generations has been on the rise for years, according to a Pew Research Center report. Now, 25% of young adults live in a multigenerational household, up from just 9% five decades ago.

  • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This in turn feeds into lower birth rates, which in turn feeds into a future lower ratio of workers to pensioners, which means lower pensions for pensioners.

    Of course, when shit hits the fan we will be told by politicians that it was totally not predictable that their decades of house-price inflation stoking policies (that handsomelly reward mainly rich investors for their great personal quality of having lots of money) would end up screwing the young and, through demographics, those who are now middle aged (and today’s young, again, when they’re old).