The share of parents in the United States who are not employed for pay has been fairly stable over the last five years. In 2021, 18% of parents didn’t work for pay, which was unchanged from 2016, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data. The share who are stay-at-home parents differs between men and women: 26% of mothers and 7% of fathers.
Over the past 30 years, the share of stay-at-home parents has fluctuated, rising during periods of higher unemployment.
How stay-at-home dads and moms compare
Between 1989 and 2021, the share of mothers who were not employed for pay decreased slightly, from 28% to 26%. Over the same span, the share of fathers who were not working increased from 4% to 7%.
Due to these diverging trends, dads now represent 18% of stay-at-home parents, up from 11% in 1989.
The reasons mothers and fathers give for not working for pay differ significantly. In 2021, the vast majority of stay-at-home moms (79%) said they took care of the home or family. About one-in-ten (9%) said they were at home because they were ill or disabled, and smaller shares said they didn’t work because they were students, unable to find work or retired.
Stay-at-home dads cite more varied reasons for not working for pay. In 2021, 23% stayed home to care for the home or family. That is up from only 4% in 1989 but still well below the share of stay-at-home moms who said the same.
About one-third of stay-at-home dads (34%) were not working due to illness or disability, down from 56% in 1989. Some 13% were retired, 13% said they could not find work and 8% were going to school.
This is Coca-Cola Plus, the “healthy” soda sold only in Japan
The Salvadoran justice system sentenced 248 members of the Mara Salvatrucha gang to prison terms of up to 1,335 years.
Taylor Swift Donates $2 Million to Fight Hunger and Heart Disease in the U.S.
IMMIGRATION
Deported Before Goodbye: Woman Never Reached Husband Dying in ICE Custody
BUSINESS
TikTok Is Giving Small Businesses a New Advantage — And Latino Entrepreneurs Could Benefit the Most
Why Your Social Media Strategy 2025 Is Already Outdated — And How to Fix It
Why Women Entrepreneurs Are Closing Businesses Faster: New GEM Report 2024
Startup Financing: Equity vs Debt — Which One Really Costs You More?