The current co-residence rate of 33% remains near the 2020 all-time high, marking a departure from historical norms. If early 2000s living patterns held, 4.86 million fewer young adults would be residing with their parents today. Instead, the combination of a national median home price of $430,000—up 34.4% since 2019—and soaring rents has created a bottleneck in household formation. This deficit is rooted in a long-term underproduction of housing, with a current shortage of approximately 4 million homes.
In section Releases
A Record 25 Million Young Americans Are Still Living at Home
A record 25.2 million adults under 35 lived with their parents in 2025, according to new data from Realtor.com. This shift, affecting one in three young adults, highlights a persistent housing affordability crisis where even those with steady employment and college degrees are effectively locked out of independent living.

Hannah Jones, senior economist at Realtor.com, emphasizes that the issue is not a failure of the labor market. Among adults aged 25 to 34, roughly 70% are employed, and a significant portion holds four-year degrees. The data suggests that the dream of the 'empty nest' is being deferred by math rather than a lack of ambition. As the typical age of a first-time homebuyer climbs toward 40, this generation faces a compounding disadvantage: every year spent in a childhood bedroom is a year of wealth accumulation lost, further widening the gap between current market reality and traditional milestones.
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