House Rules for Adult Children Living at Home

A Guide to Peaceful Cohabitation

Daniella Nicole
What To Do When an Adult Child Moves Back Home

On another site I am a member of, the question was raised as to what rules should be established with an adult child who moves back into the home. There is still an underage child in the home, and the single parent has strong feelings about church attendance.

I happened to be the first person to respond to the post. I noted in my reply that while I do not have adult children at this time, I have rented out rooms in my home to adults. I have also been in the situation, when I was married, of living with my former spouse's parents at their house, as an adult. Surprising to me was the number of other posts which came in after mine completely agreeing with all I said. They had all experienced the situation as an adult child living at home or as the parent of an adult child who moved back in. Their experiences and my own taught us all valuable lessons about how to keep the peace in the home and how to maintain healthy happy relationships with one another.

What Experience Taught Me

Whether they live under your roof or not, your adult children are just that: adults. They have the right to be treated as such, just as you have the right to expect them to act as such. Because they are adults, the rules you can appropriately have over their life and their conduct is significantly different from those you had while they were underage.

House Rules Versus Running-Their- Life Rules

This is where it gets tricky. Parents love their kids. They want the best for them. When they see their kids clearly making mistakes and bad choices, they immediately want to intervene. The key is to remember that they are adults now and they have the right to make the choices they make as well as face the consequences, good or bad, of those choices. This is when all those years of teaching them should be kicking in. We all learn through our mistakes, and we all continue to make mistakes as adults. Our adult children have the right to live as a mistake-making-consequence-facing human, just as we do. . .and as we are.

When House Rules are established, they need to remain focused on the Household. The following is a general list of common areas to address:

  • Rent. Does this amount cover just shelter, or are food and utilities covered as well? If food is not covered in the amount, will they buy their own groceries, or contribute groceries to the household? When is the rent due, and what is the late payment policy? Will a deposit be required? Will said deposit be returned in part or full? If so, under what circumstances?
  • Company. If the entrance to their private living areas is not private, you have every right to set hours for entertaining. Other areas to address would be those house rules other members of the household must follow such as no one of the opposite gender in the bedroom, no company in the house after midnight, etc. House rules apply to all in the household.
  • Chores. How will they be divided? Obviously the adult children need to be responsible for the cleaning of their own private areas, but what about shared living areas? What is the timeline for doing the chores in the common areas? How will the laundry facility be shared?
  • Household Influence. If you have a rule against no alcohol, no drugs, and no r-rated movies, for example, in your home; you have the right to extend that rule to the adult children. Anything you believe to be harmful to the environment of your home or harmful by way of example or risk to the underage children is eligible for rule setting in this category. These items must be carefully addressed so they do not become matters of running the adult child's life, or about what they do outside of the home. These rules need to stay strictly focused on the home environment.
  • Conditions of Residence. These would be rules as to why they are being allowed to move in and what will cause an eviction. Some parents have a general rule that any child living with them must be attending school full-time, working, or serving in the armed forces, as there will be no 'free ride'. If the child is in school full-time they live in the home rent-free. The other circumstances require the payment of rent, usually based upon their ability to pay.
  • Their Children and Pets. Keeping them under control and also living according to house rules. You have the right to have your privacy and your belongings respected. You have the right to expect them to parent their own children and care for their own pets. This area can become an area of contention when parents desiring to be helpful begin to interfere in the parenting style and routines of their adult children. This is a huge no-no. They are adults and those are their children. Unless your grandchildren are in imminent danger, you have no right to interfere.

Running-Their-Life Rules

It is difficult to see someone you love make choices that you know will have a bad outcome, or which you do not personally agree with. As parents of adult children, you must first and foremost respect their rights as adults.

Whether they live under your roof or not, you have no right to insist upon setting rules which interfere in their right to choose for themselves what to do with their own life. Some examples of Running-Their-Life Rules are as follows:

  • Who they may associate with outside of your home.
  • Places they may go.
  • How they dress or style their hair.
  • Whether they get piercings and tattoos
  • Where they may work or go to school
  • Where they may attend church or if they attend church or not
  • Their diet and exercise program or lack thereof
  • What line of work or field of study they may be involved in
  • How they parent their own children

In Cases of Danger Exceptions

In some cases, there is true and imminent danger involved to the safety and welfare of your adult child, their children, your own underage children, or yourself. In these cases, you have every right and responsibility to act. A few examples would be as follows:

  • Clear child abuse or neglect as outlined by your state government. Your opinion that something is neglectful or abusive must be substantiated by state law before you have the right to intervene because it may well be just your opinion.
  • Clear animal abuse or neglect as outlined by your state or local government. Your opinion that something is neglectful or abusive must be substantiated by state or local law before you have the right to intervene because it may well be just your opinion.
  • Alcohol and Drug abuse. If their life or the life of another is at risk by all means intervene. This is where programs such as Al-Anon can help you understand the dynamics and what you can and should do. You may have to become acquainted with the principles of Tough Love and actually hold an Intervention to help your adult child.

Setting the Example

The best way to teach our children is through the example that we set. They learn far more from what we do than what we say, and they do watch what we do very closely. If we expect them to live a certain way, we must be consistently and without hypocrisy living that way ourselves. Then, if we set a good example, they may choose to adopt our philosophy and way of life for themselves. They also may choose to go their own way. The point is that it is their life and their choice, and that must always be respected.

Published by Daniella Nicole

Syndicated blogger for The Fritch Show. Writer of web content, reviews, multiple showcased & featured articles, blogs, more. Published contributing author. Contributing editor. Niches: dating, relationships,...  View profile

  • Whether they live under your roof or not, your adult children are just that: adults. They have the right to be treated as such, just as you have the right to expect them to act as such.
  • Whether they live under your roof or not, you have no right to insist upon setting rules for your adult children which interfere in their right to choose for themselves what to do with their own life.
  • In some cases, there is true and imminent danger involved to the safety and welfare of your adult child, their children, your own underage children, or yourself. In these cases, you have every right and responsibility to act.
According to the AARP Bulletin online, "By 2000, when the economy again started to decline, nearly 4 million, or 10.5 percent of the 25 to 34 age group (and 12 percent of those ages 25 to 29) were living in the family home."

24 Comments

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  • Iggy5/22/2012

    I have a stepson ex marine living at home. He is a good guy. He keeps his bed clean and he is respectful. He has abused drugs and alcohol in the past, at times he has no memories of things that we havectalked about or things he must do as far as doctors appt or chores. Lately he has been staying out of the house, we have no idea where or with whom. I understand that he is an ault but he is not responsible and expects our help from financial to buying him food, clothes etc... I have 2 minors living at home, they have seen all this things and I am positive they are as tired as I am. I was the one that told my husband not to charge him rent, food or utilities. I honestly want the best for him. He even got me in trouble at my job the first day he arrived in my house. he gets more flasbacks when he drinks. Now he wants to go out with an invisible friend(we have never met) and come back next day, not one single call. I don't want this life for my children or myself...

  • Kayleigh5/7/2012

    i'm a parent of a adult child who has been in and out of my house for the past 3 yrs.this time however it's with her vegitarian bf. she turned vegetarian as well. this has caused stress for me cuz all the factors that go with it,my dishes cant touch theres, they use their own knives,my food cant touch theres in the fridge,they wont eat off anything of mine...which i guess is fine but it makes doing dishes a nitemare ! and becuse they are in my other daughters room, she sleeps with me. she wants her room back. plus i expect them to keep it clean and find i need to go in their room frequently to remind them to do certain things which they dont appreciate ugh! i am alwys on them for leaving messes too. so long story short heer bf sys he doesnt think its fair tht i charge them $200.00 a mth. which includes all utilities etc. hey i love my daughter , BUT I AM NOT THEIR MAID NOR AM I UNFAIR ! thank you !

  • phillip vickery5/13/2011

    when you are an adult and you live in your parents home they have every right to expect you to accept and live by their rules, it is not your home. no free rides. It is not a "do as i want you" are a temporary guest in another's home and should respect their living standards or move out where you may do as your please at your expense

  • the frustrated one4/25/2011

    i pay rent of $500+ a month to my parents, I'm 24 and came back home to AZ from ATL for employment and to save money to leave (which is hard at $500+ a month.) My parents attempt to induce the same practices as my childhood which consist of going through my room, reading my diary, and guilting me about student loans. Living with parents after you've been free (heck i didn't even live in this country for part of my college experience) and having to come back to rules fitting for a 12 year old is difficult at best.

  • About adult children living at home.1/23/2011

    I'd tell them that they need to work or go to school. Plenty of other adult children do the same. Give them one month to start paying 200$. Make it a monthly requirement. 200$ is more than reasonable. I paid that whe I was in high school, and working. kkit was hard, but I did it. That was more than 15 yrs ago. I learned responsibility. They need to do the same.

  • bw1/4/2011

    Ann, it is your fault....or rather, the economy's fault....for sure it really is not your mothers fault...I dont get why so many kids think that.... I guess there are times when parents could be a little more helpful but they dont owe you...remember that.

  • Rock1/4/2011

    Obviously there are many different perspectives. My adult daughter has been in and out of my home for the past 15 years. She has been in and out of unstable relationships, the latest with a cract-addicted bi-polar who fathered her youngest 3 children. Though I always express rules, organization, clean-up, discipline, structure--because they don't have any! She agrees to get her foot in the door, then she fights me every step of the way, when that happens, the children are hard to handle. She doesn't get up to see the oldest two off to school, she doesn't feed breakfast to the two little ones, so the roam all over the house, getting into things. I have broken furniture, written walls, missing hardware from all my kitchen cabinets, torn screens, scratched paint on my new car, and the list goes on and on. Yes, I can throw her out, as I have officially had to evict her in the past, she literally has no where to go. She is rude and disrespectful, and so her oldest 12 year old ha

  • door mat step mom1/3/2011

    i have 2 step daughters that came at different times. and the first one came in may and sat around til august without a job. she has a kid but he stays with his grand mother. she finally got a job after she got to go back home an be in a wedding and she brought her kid with her. well then she started working as a waitress./ well we cant complian cause she finally got a job . but i had my full time job. and my 2 little ones .her half sisters and i was expected to watch her kid too. when i finally put my foot down i was the bad guy for not wanting to watch him. he isnt even my blood. and she made sure we didnt have contact with him for several years. well he finally went back to his grandmas. after 2 months his mother got rid of him cause she was getting tired of providing for him. and it is hard to be a single parent. but she pawnd him off on me alot and she didnt have it as most do. then her sister came and she left her boy friend brought a cat that wasnt fixed and it sprayed every

  • cw1/2/2011

    Daniella Nicole, It is obvious that none of this was taken from a Biblical standpoint. Those of you who find yourselves sitting here reading this rediculous article, PLEASE consult your Pastor and do NOT take the advise of this reading!

  • RJM12/13/2010

    what if you do help out around house and don't try to cause trouble what then do Adult Children living in their parents house have Any rights at all?

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