Moving Back In With Your Parents: 15 Ways To Make It a Positive Experience
by Gary Foreman
Moving back in with your parents won’t necessarily make your life better. But here are 15 steps that can help make it a positive experience.
Thanks to COVID, in July of 2020, there were more adults ages 18 to 29 living in their parents’ home than there were during the peak of the the Great Depression era when the economy forced young adults home, according to the Pew Research Center. Many of these kids remain in their parents’ home (source: TheHill.com). So if your contemplating moving home, you’re not alone.
COVID aside, many young adults do have to temporarily move back home at some point because they are jobless or, as more often is the case, underemployed. The current economy is not helping.
No matter what the cause, moving back in with your parents can be a traumatic crossroads experience. Your life can get much better (or worse) depending on how you handle the situation. So here are 15 ways to turn moving back in with your parents into a positive experience.
1. Expect them to treat you like an adult.
You don’t need a curfew anymore. Have that discussion before you move in. Some parents may have been in the habit of waiting up for you. Talking about it up front relieves them from that responsibility.
2. Expect them to treat you like an adult (part 2).
Mom may have done your laundry and prepared your meals when you were eight. If you allow her to do that for you now, you’re subliminally telling her that you’re still a child. Don’t be surprised if she treats you as one.
3. Pay some rent.
This is more important for you than for your parents. Income might be helpful for their budget, but knowing that you have rent due will force you to look for work. You’ll be eliminating an excuse to just hang.
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4. Negotiate house rules in advance.
Can you invite a group of friends over for dinner? For a party? Know what’s allowed before you move in.
5. Ask for a lease.
Negotiating a lease will force both you and your parents to think through some of the questions/difficulties that your new relationship will face. If you wait until there’s an incident, it will be harder to find a good solution.
6. Expect your parents to supply a pathway, not a destination.
Their job is to help you become a fully functional, self-reliant adult. Not someone who’s forever dependent upon them.
7. Be willing to help with routine family chores.
If you’re not working, it only makes sense that you do the family shopping or vacuuming.
8. Offer to pay part of the utility and grocery bills.
You’ll be using electricity and hitting the fridge. It’s only fair that you should pay for it. Plus, when you do start getting your own utility bills, it won’t be such a shock.
9. Have a plan that goes beyond video games and Facebook.
Create a detailed plan on what you’ll need to do to get your career started and be out on your own. Make sure that the plan contains specific things that will move you closer to your goal. Then work on at least one item on the list every day.
10. Be willing to take a job that’s “beneath” you.
You could wait years to find a job that your education/training prepared you for. You need money now. Take any job today. Then look for a better one tomorrow.
11. Don’t ask your parents for money.
When you’re a child, you might have gotten an allowance. As an adult, you don’t get one.
12. Don’t take your parents’ support for granted.
To assume that you can stay as long as you like is to assume that you’ll never grow up. Part of your goal should be to have a target of when you’ll be able to afford an apartment. Your plan should keep that target date in mind.
13. Disagree like an adult.
It’s not easy to redefine a relationship with your parents. One way to guarantee failure is to continue to relate to them in a childish way. Some adults have a habit of stomping their feet if they don’t get their way. Don’t make it easy for your parents (or anyone else) to treat you like a child.
14. Recognize that your parents may want to protect you from any hardship.
Don’t let them do it. You’ll be locking yourself and them into a dysfunctional relationship. Rather look at the hardships as opportunities to grow and survive. They’ll be the things you tell your kids about twenty years from now.
15. Don’t get too comfortable.
Comfort is your enemy! You shouldn’t be comfortable until you’ve reached your goals. To get comfortable now is to accept that you’ll always be dependent on your parents and will always need to hold their hand when you cross the street.
Reviewed March 2023
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About the Author
Gary Foreman is the former owner and editor of The Dollar Stretcher. He's the author of How to Conquer Debt No Matter How Much You Have and has been featured in MSN Money, Yahoo Finance, Fox Business, The Nightly Business Report, US News Money, Credit.com and CreditCards.com.
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