I'd suggest you ignore any of the advice from people suggesting you've failed in some way because you're still at home at 35. It's common in most cultures to have closer ties to families, but in some way you're considered odd to be living at home in later age here. It's far more sensible to be living with you parents than spending a ton of money renting someone else's house for that tiny little bonus of having it to yourself..
Never left home at all? No uni or anything?
No fling with a bird that ended up renting a crap flat for 6 months...
The mind boggles at the kind of people who don't think having your own independence in your mid-thirties is worth anything. They are essentially crippling their own social and emotional development, as is pretty damn clear in the case of the OP.
I'd suggest you ignore any of the advice from people suggesting you've failed in some way because you're still at home at 35. It's common in most cultures to have closer ties to families, but in some way you're considered odd to be living at home in later age here. It's far more sensible to be living with you parents than spending a ton of money renting someone else's house for that tiny little bonus of having it to yourself.
People that don't live in London have no idea what it takes to buy a house here these days. You could easily go from being happy and comfortable to being in a horrible area, tied to 30 years of debt, alone and for what? a tiny piece of independence.
I wouldn't worry what anybody else thinks mate. I left home at 24, bought my own place but sold it and travel around now instead. When I'm in the UK I stay at my parents and I'm fine with that.
Be thankful you have a great relationship with your parents that lets you still be there, rather than someone that feels they need to get away from them as soon as they can.
The difference between now and 20 years ago though is the cost is far greater, so yes there will be negative elements related to his situation, but the cost to move out could be even more negative.
My advice would be jack the job in, take your money and go live somewhere else. If you're 35 and earn less than 50k a year in London go enjoy yourself somewhere else in Europe and come back when sanity returns.
What prices were 20 years ago is essentially irrelevant and should never be an excuse for not moving out of your parents house by your mid-thirties. You have a life to live, and so do they.
Other people seem to manage with moving out and building a life, it's part of being a grown adult.
You seem to think his parents can't live their lives with their son at home? Why is this? Perhaps they like having him around.
What the prices are now is very relevant and should certainly be used as an excuse for not indebting yourself to decades of work for crap.
OP, get out of London, you're stagnating and staying there won't help. Go live in Amsterdam, Prague, Berlin, Madrid, Genoa, Warsaw, Krakow etc for a year. This would be far of far more benefit than moving down the road to a 200k ex council flat.
Your biggest life change is that you will realise you need to cook your own food and wash your own pants
The whole "looking for a long term relationship" goal is rubbish. That will find you.![]()
Doesn't take forget wipe his own backside and brush his own teeth! Man they were big steps foe me...
This.
But also, that amazing realization of when you come back home something is exactly where you left it![]()