Report reveals how adults in Cork are at risk of becoming homeless due to breakdown of relationship with a parent

The Cork Simon Community building in Cork. The Cork Simon report, entitled ‘Home Truths: Single Adults Living With Their Parents’ shows that more than one in 10 single adults new to emergency accommodation in the South-West became homeless due to a relationship breakdown with a parent.
The report, titled ‘Home Truths: Single Adults Living With Their Parents’, shows that more than one in 10 single adults new to emergency accommodation in the South-West became homeless due to a relationship breakdown with a parent.
The author of the report, Sophie Johnston, told
“Younger adults are over-represented in homelessness services”, adding that this age group is also likely to be either living with parents or in private rental accommodation, both of which can be precarious and lead to homelessness.One third of all 25- to 29-year-olds were living with parents in 2022, compared to under a quarter in 2011, and 23% of people aged 25-34 lived with their parents in 2022, up from 17% in 2011. Ms Johnston said: “While there are no doubt benefits and positives to living at home, and many parents and adult children will manage the relationship well, this type of doubled-up housing can add pressure to households, challenge relationships, and is inherently insecure for adult children.”