• 2 months ago
Young adults in southern and eastern European countries tend to stick around longer with their parents, OECD and Eurostat data shows.
Transcript
00:00How many young Europeans live with their parents?
00:09European adults leave their parents home at 26 on average according to Eurostat estimations.
00:19However, the age varies significantly from nation to nation in Finland, Sweden and Denmark.
00:27They usually move out by the age of 21.
00:33By contrast, in Croatia, Slovakia, Greece, Spain, Bulgaria and Italy that normally doesn't happen before they're at least 30.
00:46In terms of overall number of young adults still living with their parents,
00:51the shares are particularly high in Southern Europe.
00:58Italy's got the highest proportion of people that haven't left, 80%.
01:06Followed by Greece at 78%, Spain at 77% and Portugal at 76%.
01:15Nordic countries Norway, Finland, Sweden and Denmark have the lowest rates, all below 20%.

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