The latest data confirms what has quietly been building for years, and now it is no longer anecdotal but systemic, as roughly 64% of parents with Gen Z children aged 18 to 28 say their adult kids still rely on them financially for housing, money, or basic support, while 56% of those parents admit that this arrangement is putting strain on their own finances, which means we are looking at a generational shift where adulthood itself is being delayed on a scale not seen in modern times.
This is being explained away as an economic problem, with references to high costs of living, weak entry-level wages, and housing affordability, and while those factors are real, they are not the full story because previous generations faced economic hardship as well, yet they still transitioned into independence, and what we are seeing now is not just economic pressure but a breakdown in the cultural expectation of self-sufficiency.
There is a dangerous normalization taking place where parents are no longer helping temporarily but are effectively subsidizing adult lifestyles, and in many cases this support is not minor, with studies showing parents spending well over $1,000 per month on adult children while simultaneously neglecting their own retirement savings, which is creating a cascading financial problem where one generation is undermining its own future to sustain another.
At the same time, nearly half of Gen Z adults describe their financial lives as “messy,” and many are delaying core milestones such as moving out, getting married, or establishing careers, which historically marked the transition into adulthood, and when those milestones are postponed, the entire structure of society shifts because independence is replaced with prolonged dependency.
What is particularly troubling is that this dependence is increasingly being rationalized rather than challenged, because instead of pushing young adults toward independence, the narrative has shifted to accommodating the situation indefinitely, and that is where the long-term damage occurs since cycles are driven not just by economics but by behavior.
I have said many times that when a society begins to lose its work ethic and sense of personal responsibility, it is already entering a phase of decline, because economic systems depend on individuals striving for independence and productivity, and once that incentive weakens, growth slows and stagnation follows.