Eurostat: One in Four Czechs Aged 25–35 Still Live with Their Parents

For many young people across Europe, leaving the family home is no longer a natural step into adulthood. Rising rents, expensive mortgages and unstable incomes are changing how an entire generation lives. In the Czech Republic, this shift is becoming increasingly visible. According to the latest data from Eurostat, more than a quarter of Czechs aged between 25 and 35 still live with their parents. The figure stands at 25.9 percent and continues to grow. Similar patterns can be seen across the region, especially in Central and Eastern Europe, where housing costs are rising faster than wages. The trend is even more pronounced in neighbouring Poland. Almost 40 percent of single people aged 25 to 35 there still live in their parents’ homes. Over the past decade alone, that share has increased by ten percentage points. Among Poles aged 18 to 34, nearly seven out of ten have not yet moved out. Within the European Union, Poland now ranks fifth in this category. Experts say the reasons go far beyond individual choices. Sociologist Vojtěch Bednář points to a mix of low incomes and long-term uncertainty. Young people today, he argues, grow up in an atmosphere shaped by warnings about economic... The post Eurostat: One in Four Czechs Aged 25–35 Still Live with Their Parents appeared first on Prague Morning .