Economic Policy and Young Adulthood in Colorado, Part 1 of 4
Young adulthood is a period of rapid transition in living arrangements, schooling, and work for most young people living in Colorado. These transitions are not just marked by personal milestones like graduation from high school or living away from parents for the first time; for many young adults this period includes exposure to poverty, food insecurity, housing instability, and gaps in health insurance coverage, especially for young adults with low incomes who cannot rely on family resources to the same extent as their higher income peers.
Unfortunately, state and federal social safety net programs were not designed around the lived realities of today’s 18–24-year-olds. Major public programs, including SNAP, Medicaid, TANF, housing assistance, and state and federal tax credits, are built on assumptions that are more likely to reflect the circumstances of Coloradans later in adulthood—stable full-time work, predictable housing, and household structures consisting of two parents and their children (i.e., the nuclear family). Their design is consistent with an assumption that young adults can rely on their family for support when facing economic insecurity, either over a period of time or as a result of a one-time event, like job loss.
This report challenges those assumptions, drawing on the 2019–2023 5-year American Community Survey and a substantial body of national research to profile the approximately 528,700 Coloradans who were between the ages of 18 and 24 in 2023—who they are, where they live, how they engage with work and education, and what their economic circumstances actually look like. The picture that emerges is not of an age cohort failing to launch, but of one that is navigating a labor market and a cost of living that are structurally misaligned with the job opportunities and support systems available to them.
This report is the first in a four-part series on young adults and their economic security in Colorado.





CCLP Public Comment on Housing Assistance for Mixed Status Families
Public Comment, Publications