A ten-year survey of millennials reveals that almost one in four (22.6%) 26-year-olds are still living with their parents.
The U.S. Department of Education report confirmed that, if you are tired of living with Mom and Dad, then do your homework and stay in school.
According to the survey titled“Where Are They Now," education makes a difference: generally those with more schooling were less likely to be living at home.
The study shed some light on how older millennials have been faring during the Great Recession.
According to the survey titled“Where Are They Now," education makes a difference: generally those with more schooling were less likely to be living at home.
The study shed some light on how older millennials have been faring during the Great Recession.
According to a Pew Research analysis of the 2012 data, lower levels of employment, an increase in college enrollment, and a decrease in young people getting married are major factors in the increase of millennials living at home.
The survey followed 13,000 high school students who were sophomores in 2002, and checked in with them in 2012 to see where are they now. Some of the results are:
- 10% living with roommate(s), prompting fellow millennial Katy Waldman to write an embarrassing Slate article bearing the headline, "More 27-Year-Olds Live With Parents Than Roommates"
- 53.8 percent made less than $25,000 from employment in 2011
- 40% had been unemployed for one or more months since January 2009
- 13% reported they were neither working for pay nor taking postsecondary courses
- 60.2 % of those who had enrolled in college, reported they had taken out student loans
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