10 States Where Multigenerational Households Are Becoming More Common
In these states, you're more likely to find grandparents living with their kids and grandkids.
Editor’s note: This story originally appeared on SmartAsset.com.
The U.S. Census Bureau says that multigenerational households are more common among recent immigrants who live with relatives and families residing in areas that have housing shortages or high real estate costs. Other economic factors like mounting student debt and lack of employment can also drive people to move in with family in order to save money. Such households exist across the country and can work with a financial adviser to create a strategy that stretches their dollars further, but those living in these types of arrangements are not evenly distributed nationwide. With that in mind, SmartAsset has crunched the numbers to see which states have more multigenerational households.