This state has the most Gen Z and millennial kids still living at home heres why their parents are stuck with them

Some birds haven’t flown the coop.Moving out on your own has long been considered a mark of adulthood, but in recent years, young adults are purposely delaying getting their own keys — especially in one state.According to a new Pew Research Center analysis of government data, California parents are the unlucky ones, as they have the most 25 to 34-year-olds living at home with them.The main reason young adults say they’re still at home? The economic climate.

Figures.Specifically, the study said Vallejo and Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura were the two California metropolitan areas with the highest number of Gen Z and millennials at home — each with 33%.El Centro, California, (32%), Brownsville-Harlingen, Texas, (31%,) Riverside- San Bernardino-Ontario, California, (30%) and Merced, California, (30%) followed down the list.Rounding out the top ten were McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Texas, Naples-Marco Island, Florida, Racine-Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, and Port St.Lucie, Florida.Meanwhile, in Odessa, Texas, Lincoln, Nebraska, Ithaca, New York, and Bloomington, Indiana, only about 3% of young adults lived at home.

While the number of young adults living with their parents skyrocketed during the pandemic, it increased even before the lockdown.Now, a few years later, from the looks of it — these adult kids aren’t going anywhere.But who specifically of the two generations is living at home?Throughout the country, young men are more likely to live at home (20% vs.15%).When accounting for race, White young adults are less likely than their Asian, Hispanic and Black peers to live in a parent’s home, according to the Pew Research Center.

For the most part, the 10 metro areas with the lowest shares of young adults living with their parents have a higher-than-average share of White young adults.However, these trends aren’t always true.

According to Census data, the population of Vallejo is 32% White, 30% Hispanic, 17% Asian, 12% Black and 9% other.Meanwhile, the pop...

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Publisher: New York Post

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