But increasingly, it is a decision many recent graduates are making, often out of economic necessity but also because of the ...
A survey finds that 58% of young adults—or 3 in 5—have left their parents home only to return, including 15% who have done it ...
When you work hard to save for college and send your kids off to get a degree, your hope is to set them on a path where they become functional, financially independent adults. But what if your grown ...
NEW YORK (AP) — A shaky economy. Overwhelming student debt. Few job prospects. Some recent college graduates have a burdensome mountain of reasons to move back home. For others, the choice may be easy ...
Like many pandemic graduates, my young adult life started not with a bang, but with a whimper. There was no big celebration, just a diploma picked up from the school office and a new job as an ...
More than half of young adults who returned home said the move was financially necessary, while another quarter said it wasn't necessary but offered financial benefits, according to a recent survey.
Another ironic illustration of the recession's vicious cycle: due to poor economic conditions, college graduates who can't find jobs head back home to live with their parents, which, in turn, appears ...
“I’m not a housewife,” my mother caterwauled during an argument. “I’m not married to my house. I’m married to your f–king father!” I was 18 and preparing to move 327 miles away for college the next ...