Who Is Getting Help and How Much
It is easy to feel like you are the only adult still taking money from Mom and Dad. The numbers say otherwise.
That is nearly half the country. And the breakdown by age tells a clear story.
Among Gen Z adults, 72% are in that group. For millennials, it is more than half. Even one-third of Gen X still gets a hand from their parents.
No One Is to Blame
It is tempting to point fingers. The kid must not be trying hard enough. The parents must be too soft. Megan McCoy, a financial therapist and Kansas State University professor, urges people to drop that story.
"Language around supporting adult children tends to always have a bad guy," she said. "But I wish people saw it more as a dance between people, and that neither of them is the reason this is going on."
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McCoy calls it a pattern that develops over time, not a sign that anyone is failing.
What Experts Say to Do Next
The study also included advice from certified financial planner Nikki Macdonald about how to handle these money relationships well.
One big idea: give money earlier rather than later. Waiting to pass on an inheritance can defeat the purpose. "Oftentimes, that inheritance comes when the child is at the most financially stable part of their lives," McCoy said. Providing financial assistance while children are relatively young - such as covering student loans, including them on your health plan, paying for unexpected bills, helping with a down payment on a house, or covering their rent during graduate studies - makes a significantly larger difference.
Macdonald also recommends clear, ongoing family conversations about money. If everyone knows what to expect, there is less resentment and fewer surprises.
And if you are a parent giving money, talk to a professional first. You do not want to put your own retirement at risk. A little planning now can keep both sides stable.
The Broader Context
The prevalence of parental financial support reflects broader economic pressures that have made it harder for young adults to achieve financial independence. Rising housing costs, student loan debt, and stagnant wages all contribute to the need for continued family assistance. The study highlights that this is not a new phenomenon but an evolving pattern that adapts to changing economic realities. By understanding these forces, families can approach the situation with less judgment and more practical planning.
What It Means for Your Money
If you are getting help from your parents, you are in good company.
If you are a parent giving help, the experts are clear: do it early, talk about it openly, and make sure you are protected first. A gift that drains your retirement helps nobody.
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