Even if they don’t live at home, more than half of Gen Z adults and millennials are financially dependent on their parents, according to a separate survey by Experian.
For parents, however, supporting grown children can be a substantial drain at a time when their own financial security is in jeopardy.
Not surprisingly, parents are more likely to pay for most of the expenses when two or more generations share a home. The typical 25- to 34-year-old in a multigenerational household contributes 22% of the total household income, Pew found.
From buying groceries to paying for cellphone plans or covering health and auto insurance, parents are spending more than $1,400 a month, on average, helping their adult children make ends meet, another report by Savings.com found.
“It has to go both ways,” Kotlikoff said.
Overall, there can be an economic benefit to these living arrangements, Pew found, and Americans living in multigenerational households are less likely to be financially vulnerable. “If you are in financial union, make the best of it,” Kotlikoff said.
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