One in five Zillennials give up on life milestones due to rising living costs


One in five Zillennials give up on life milestones due to rising living costs

Over one in five young people in the UK have given up on achieving major life goals due to the rising cost of living. Mounting financial pressures are causing many Britons aged 18-34 to give up hope of getting married, starting a family, and buying their first property.

With inflation running at 6.8 per cent and interest rates at a 15-year high, research by Novuna Personal Finance reveals that a Zillennial generation has written off-key life milestones as unachievable. Nearly a quarter (23 per cent) of 24–34-year-olds have abandoned hope of getting on the property ladder altogether, while the proportion who have given up on marriage and starting a family is at a staggering 18 per cent and 21 per cent respectively. Retirement also feels like a pipedream for many Brits, 14 per cent of all Brits have given up on this dream altogether, rising to 17 per cent in 25-34-year-olds.

According to the research, affordability and the rising cost of living were cited as the most common reason for feeling behind on a range of milestones. More than three-quarters (79 per cent) of Zillennials gave it as the primary reason for not getting onto the housing ladder, while 77 per cent said due to rising cost of living they simply couldn’t afford to move out of their parent’s house. Additionally, when it comes to getting married and starting a family, the cost of living and personal financial circumstances are the main reasons for feeling behind, especially for 18–34-year-olds. 41 per cent of the younger generation citied their financial situation as the reason they have yet to get married and 43 per cent cited the same reason for why they have put off having a family.

Stagnating wages have bred a sense of pessimism amongst young people. The research reveals that Brits target 30 as the age to earn more than the national average. For those that haven’t achieved the milestone, 22 per cent of Brits have given up on earning the average wage altogether.

First full-time job by 21, engaged by 30

The study also uncovered when people expect to reach a range of other key life milestones. By the age of 21, Brits believe they should have already fallen in love, passed their driving test, gone on their first holiday without their parents and secured their first full time job.

As we reach the big Three-O, Novuna research reveals that the British public believes they should be earning at least the average wage (29 years old) and be engaged (29 years old). That’s if they can get over the first hurdle of independence, moving out of their parent’s house, which should be achieved by the age of 25.

The start of the third decade of life, should involve buying a property, getting married and starting a family. All of which should be achieved by the age of 31, according to the research.

Milestone Age Brits feel it should be achieved
Fall in love for the first time 21
Pass driving test 21
First holiday without parents 21
First full-time job 21
Complete education 22
Get first car 23
Leave parents’ home 25
Get engaged 29
Earn the average wage 30
Buy first property 31
Get married 31
Start a family 31
Retire 64

It is harder than ever for the younger generation to achieve these milestones compared to the generations before them. On average over 55-year-olds were engaged by 24 and had bought their first property at 28. Whereas, over half of 25–34-year-olds have yet to get engaged (53 per cent) or buy their first property (51 per cent).

Theresa Lindsay, marketing director at Novuna says: “From salary expectations to starting a family, our research highlights the gap between what we feel we should achieve by a certain age and the reality.

“What’s staggering is the high percentage of 18–35-year-olds abandoning hope of ever achieving some of life’s key milestones.  Property prices, slow wage growth and the cost of living have dented the confidence of this generation, coming after a succession of crisis that have already disrupted key moments in their life, causing a level of pessimism not seen elsewhere.”

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