Law

New Marquette Law School Poll finds large percentages of older adults nationwide are connected closely to grown children and grandchildren

Also:

  • By age 40, three-quarters of adults have children
  • Trust across generations in families is generally strong
  • About half of adults say their standard of living is better than their parents’ was
  • 7 in 10 say they are adherents to an organized religion
  • 60% say religion is important in their lives

MILWAUKEE – American family life doesn’t end when the kids leave home. A new Marquette Law School Poll national survey provides in-depth insights into the way the lives of individuals and extended families evolve beyond many people’s child-raising years.

Most government statistics focus on fertility and child-rearing but pay little attention to family life after children reach age 18. This Marquette survey examined aspects of family life among parents of adult offspring, including the role of grandparents. This provides glimpses of family relationships across the second half of life.

The survey finds that large numbers of families have active multigenerational lives, including grandparents who frequently care for grandchildren and families in which all the grandparents, parents, and grandchildren live within 50 miles of each other. Relatively few of those in later life, including after 70, are isolated from their children.

The survey also examined important aspects of American religious life, including how frequently people attend religious services, how often they pray, and how their religious lives as adults compare to their religious involvement as teenagers.

The Marquette Law School Poll survey was conducted June 9-15, 2026, interviewing 1,514 adults nationwide, with a margin of error of +/-2.7 percentage points. This is the fourth of four news releases announcing results of the survey, which looked at an array of aspects of the lives and attitudes of American adults as the nation marks the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

From school-age to post-school-age families

Among American adults, aged 18 and older, 38% don’t have children of any age. Making up the 62% of adults with children, 20% have only children younger than 18, 8% have children both younger than 18 and children 18 or older, and 34% have children only 18 or older.

There are transitions in family composition as parents age. The youngest age groups can only have younger children, and eventually the oldest groups are very unlikely to have children under 18.

Just 25% of adults under age 30 reported having children, with 100% of those parents having children under 18. That increased to 56% with children for adults in their 30s. This age cohort reported 48% having only young children, 5% of adults having both young children and adult offspring, and 3% with only adult children.

The 40s mark the transition from younger children to adult children, among the 75% of these adults having children. These families have almost as many young and old children (26% of these families) as only young (30%), with a sharp increase over those in their 30s in respect to having only adult children (19%). This also marks the point at which most childbearing ceases. Only 25% of those in their 40s have no children.

In the 50s and beyond, the percentage with only adult children grows with each decade of age, and very few have younger children. The percentage with no children also levels off in these years after the end of childbearing. There is only a small decrease in childlessness among those 70 or older. (All results in the tables are stated as percentages.)

These transitions are shown by age in Table 1.

Table 1: Young and adult children, by parental age

Among adults

AgeYoung and old children
Young kids onlyYoung and adult kidsAdult kids onlyNo children
18-29250075
30-39485344
40-4930261925
50-594165129
60-69126929
70+127818
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How many children do you have who are 18 years old or older? How many children do you have who are 17 years old or younger?

Most government surveys report on number of children per household rather than the number of children an individual has, as is done in this survey. An exception is the National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG), conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and the National Center for Health Statistics. That study measures the number children ever born to women of childbearing age and children ever fathered by men, in both cases for those between 15 and 49 years old. The Marquette Law School Poll can construct a similar measure for those 18-49, and by gender. This comparison shows that the Marquette data closely match the estimates from NSFG, as shown in Table 2.

Table 2: Number of children of any age

Among those 18-49 (Marquette Law Poll) or 15-49 (NSFG)

ResponseNumber of children
Marquette Law Poll percent, among women 18-49NSFG percent, among women 15-49Marquette Law Poll percent among men 18-49NSFG percent, among men 15-49
None42455556
One17161514
Two20211718
Three1012712
Four+1166NA
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026 / National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG), CDC/NCHS, 2017-2019
Question (Marquette Law Poll): How many children do you have who are 18 years old or older? How many children do you have who are 17 years old or younger?
Question (NSFG): Number of children ever born, number of children ever fathered. For NSFG men, the entry for 3 children is for 3 or more

Adults are likely to enter their 40s with children, and usually multiple children, though under 30% have no children. For such older adults, the percentage who have children is larger than it would appear from the previous table because the previous table includes those in the childbearing years who have not yet had children but will.

To get a clearer picture, which includes all children and a look at later adulthood, the total number of offspring by parental age is shown in Table 3.

Table 3: Total number of children, by parental age

Among adults

AgeNumber of children
NoneOneTwoThreeFour+
18-297514623
30-3944192188
40-492516291516
50-592913261715
60-692917271711
70+1813361914
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How many children do you have who are 18 years old or older? How many children do you have who are 17 years old or younger?

For people in their 40s and beyond, more than half have two or more children. Barring untimely death, these adult children will define and extend family for their parents though the end of the parents’ lives.

Adult children extend their parents’ family by creating grandchildren. In this survey, 43% of parents have at least one grandchild, but that figure includes those too young to have grandchildren yet. The number of grandchildren by age is shown in Table 4.

Table 4: Number of grandchildren, by age

Among those with children

AgeNumber of grandchildren
NoneOneTwoThreeFourFiveSix+
18-29100000000
30-3997210000
40-49751264111
50-59579106548
60-693014111211419
70+108228121030
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How many grandchildren do you have?

While the number of children becomes stable in the 40s, the presence of grandchildren, and their number, grow throughout the later years among those who have children. Grandchildren are a prominent part of family life for older Americans, and many have four or more.

Grandparents engage with their grandchildren in many ways, but a prominent one is through providing childcare of one sort or another. Among grandparents, 50% say they take care of a grandchild at least once a month, with 31% doing so a few times a year and 20% who never take care of a grandchild.

Another window into this is parents who say they have one or more of their parents take care of a child. Among these middle-generation parents, 38% say a parent cares for a grandchild at least monthly, with 28% reporting this happens a few times a year and 34% saying that they don’t have a grandparent take care of a child.

Adulthood is generally marked by children leaving home and starting homes of their own, but for most parents this doesn’t mean an end to proximity to their children. For those with adult children, 45% have all of their adult children within 50 miles of the parents. Another 37% have some children near and others far, while 18% have all of their children living more than 50 miles away.

As parents age, their adult children’s lives also change, and this may include relocation for a variety of reasons. Despite this potential, a large majority of parents with adult children continue to live within 50 miles of at least one grown child. For most parents of adult children, at least some children live nearby, regardless of the age of parents. For those younger than 60, only about 15% have all their adult children more than 50 miles away, though this percentage rises to about 20% for those in their 60s or older. Thus, upwards of 80% of parents have at least some adult children living within an hour’s drive. This is shown in Table 5.

Table 5: Distance to adult children

Among those with adult children

AgeNear or far
Both near and farNear onlyFar only
40-49355015
50-59374815
60-69344620
70+423622
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How many of your adult children 18 or over live within 50 miles of your home?
Question: How many of your adult children 18 or over live more than 50 miles from your home?

Proximity fosters interaction with grandchildren as well. For those with adult children within 50 miles of their home and at least one grandchild, 56% say they take care of the grandchild at least once a month, while among those whose adult children all live beyond 50 miles, this rate drops to 18% and care only a few times a year rises to 46%, representing in part the occasional family visit. For those with only distant grandchildren, more than a third say they never provide childcare (36%), though this does not rule out visits. This is shown in Table 6.

Table 6: Take care of grandchild, by distance of adult children

Among those with grandchildren

Distance of adult childrenCare for grandchild
More than once a monthA few times a yearNever
Has adult kids w/in 50 mi562717
No adult kids w/in 50mi184636
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: [Take care of a grandchild] How often do you do the following things?
Question: How many of your adult children 18 or over live (within/more than) 50 miles from your home?

Caring for grandchildren seems to peak for grandparents in their 50s, a time when both their children and grandchildren are relatively young, and then declines with age, though taking care of grandchildren remains common into the 70s, as shown in Table 7.

Table 7: Take care of grandchild, by age of grandparent

Among those with grandchildren

AgeCare for grandchild
More than once a monthA few times a yearNever
40-49473024
50-5961336
60-69562816
70+413228
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: [Take care of a grandchild] How often do you do the following things?
Note: There are too few grandparents in their 30s for analysis, so they are omitted from the table.

This picture of families with adult children and grandchildren shows there is considerable interaction throughout life, with most families remaining, at least in part, in geographic proximity, and connections with grandchildren playing a prominent role in the lives of older Americans. Relatively few of those in later life, including after 70, are isolated from their children. It should be noted that this analysis has focused exclusively on those with children and has not considered the later lives of those who do not have children, an important topic to be explored another time.

Trust in your family

To shift focus, not all families are happy families. Looking at trust of immediate family, 62% say they can trust their immediate family a great deal, 30% trust their family a fair amount, 6% say they trust family not very much, and 2% trust them not at all. (In subsequent analysis, the last two categories are combined.)

Marital status is associated with trust in the family, with married people expressing the greatest level of trust, while those who have never married are the least trusting, as shown in Table 8.

Table 8: Trust in family, by marital status

Among adults

Marital statusTrust in immediate family
A great dealA fair amountNot much/not at all
Married71253
Widowed60319
Single, living with a partner563310
Divorced/Separated55378
Single, that is, never married503615
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: [Your immediate family] How much can you trust the following people?

Having children boosts family trust regardless of marital status, but by just four percentage points among married people and by six points among those not currently married.

While those who are currently divorced or separated are less trusting, among those currently married, a previous divorce has little effect on trust in the family. Among those married with a previous divorce, 68% say they trust family a great deal, while for those without a previous divorce, 72% trust family a great deal, as shown in Table 9.

Table 9: Trust in family, by prior divorce

Among currently married adults

Prior divorceTrust in immediate family
A great dealA fair amountNot much/not at all
Yes68274
No72253
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: [Your immediate family] How much can you trust the following people?
Question: Have you ever been divorced?

Trust in family members is lowest for the youngest age group and highest for the oldest, but varies little for those between 30 and 69, as seen in Table 10.

Table 10: Trust in family, by age

Among adults

AgeTrust in immediate family
A great dealA fair amountNot much/not at all
18-29473715
30-3963299
40-4960328
50-5966285
60-6964324
70+78193
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: [Your immediate family] How much can you trust the following people?

Financial stress plays a substantial role in reducing trust in family. Among those who say they are struggling financially, 42% say they trust their family a great deal, compared to 61% among those who are just getting by and 70% among those who say they are living comfortably. Similarly, trust in family is related to income levels, as seen in Table 11.

Table 11: Trust in family, by income

Among adults

IncomeTrust in immediate family
A great dealA fair amountNot much/not at all
Less than $50k513712
$50k-$100k64315
More than $100k76204
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: [Your immediate family] How much can you trust the following people?

Intergenerational standard of living

Intergenerational economic mobility is an important aspect of family life. Compared to the standard of living they experienced growing up, about half say they are now better off. That includes 21% who say they are much better off and 31% who are somewhat better off, while 20% are somewhat worse off and 9% are much worse off. Twenty percent say their standard of living is about the same as when they were young.

An improved standard of living is somewhat related to education, especially for those with more than a bachelor’s degree. Substantially reduced standards of living are more common with those who finished high school or less, as seen in Table 12.

Table 12: Change in standard of living, by education

Among adults

EducationChange in standard of living since childhood
Much betterSomewhat betterAbout the sameSomewhat worseMuch worse
Less than HS1434161916
HS graduate1929231712
Vocational/tech school/some college/ associates203017248
Bachelor’s degree203321225
Post grad study/professional degree313018165
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Compared to your parents when you were growing up, do you think your own standard of living now is better or worse than theirs was?

Current financial strain also affects how people see their standard of living compared to that during their childhood. Those who are most comfortable are much more likely to say they are better off, while those who are struggling remember things being better when they were young, as shown in Table 13.

Table 13: Change in standard of living, by current financial situation

Among adults

Current financial situationChange in standard of living since childhood
Much betterSomewhat betterAbout the sameSomewhat worseMuch worse
Living comfortably35371891
Just getting by1129232810
Struggling717163128
Marquette Law School Poll, national,  June 9-15, 2026
Question: Compared to your parents when you were growing up, do you think your own standard of living now is better or worse than theirs was?

Similarly, present income is substantially related to the sense of improving or worsening standard of living, as Table 14 shows.

Table 14: Change in standard of living, by income

Among adults

IncomeChange in standard of living since childhood
Much betterSomewhat betterAbout the sameSomewhat worseMuch worse
Less than $50k1324242514
$50k-$100k203320207
More than $100k313814144
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Compared to your parents when you were growing up, do you think your own standard of living now is better or worse than theirs was?

Income is related to marital status, but within income levels, more of those who are married say their standard of living has improved since childhood than those who are not married. This is especially true of lower and higher income groups, with only a small difference for those in the middle range of income, shown in Table 15.

Table 15: Change in standard of living, by income and marital status

Among adults

Married or notChange in standard of living since childhood
BetterSameWorse
Less than $50k
Married512128
Not married312543
$50k-$100k
Married542125
Not married531829
More than $100k
Married721315
Not married561628
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Compared to your parents when you were growing up, do you think your own standard of living now is better or worse than theirs was?

Faith and family

Most Americans say they identify as adherents to a religious group, though the percentage not affiliated has grown in recent years. In this survey, 28% say they are not adherents, while more than 70% identify themselves with a religious tradition. Table 16 shows the size of each group.

Table 16: Religious affiliation

Among adults

Religion 
Percent
Born-again Protestant23
Mainline Protestant18
Roman Catholic19
No religion28
Other religion11
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: What is your present religion, if any?

While fewer than a third of Americans say they are not affiliated with a religion, more than half say they seldom or never attend worship services. The rate of attendance is shown in Table 17.

Table 17: Attendance at religious services

Among adults

Attendance 
Percent
More than once a week6
Once a week15
Once or twice a month9
A few times a year14
Seldom22
Never34
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?

Each religious group has a substantial number of adherents who seldom or never attend services. The highest attendance is among born-again Protestants, followed at some distance by Roman Catholics, by those of other religions (which is a heterogeneous mixture of faiths), and by mainline Protestants with the least regular attendance. Those who say they have no religion are very unlikely to attend, though a few do, at least occasionally. This is shown in Table 18.

Table 18: Religious attendance, by affiliation

Among adults

ReligionAttendance
Regularly (monthly or more)A few times a yearSeldomNever
Born-again Protestant57141911
Mainline Protestant24243022
Roman Catholic39152521
No religion461871
Other religion32192227
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?
Question: What is your present religion, if any?

Family plays an important role in attendance. Of married couples who say they affiliate with a religion, those whose spouse shares their faith are more than twice as likely to regularly attend worship services than if the spouse does not share their faith. Likewise, when faiths do not match, more seldom or never attend, as shown in Table 19. Among married couples, 79% say they are of the same faith.

Table 19: Religious attendance, by spouse shares faith

Among married adults affiliated with a religion

Does spouse share faith?Attendance
Regularly (monthly or more)A few times a yearSeldomNever
Yes49172113
No21163430
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?
Question: Do you and your spouse share the same religious faith?

Reported rates of church attendance for the respondents and for their spouse (among married couples) are closely aligned, as shown in Table 20.

Table 20: Attendance by self and by spouse

Among married adults

Self or spouseAttendance
Regularly (monthly or more)A few times a yearSeldomNever
Self34142230
Spouse34121639
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How often does your spouse attend religious services?
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?

Attendance for self and spouse is very strongly correlated for those who share a faith, as seen in Table 21.

Table 21: Attendance for spouse, by self-attendance

Among married adults who share same faith

Self-attendanceSpouse attendance
Regularly (monthly or more)A few times a yearSeldomNever
Regularly (monthly or more)92431
A few times a year12641510
Seldom1045630
Never22492
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?
Question: How often does your spouse attend religious services?

Beyond affiliation and attendance, religious practice includes prayer and reading sacred texts. Given relatively low attendance rates of respondents, a surprisingly large number of people (55%) say they pray at least a few times a week. This contrasts with just 21% who attend religious services weekly. Furthermore, prayer is frequent even among those who attend services only rarely, including those who never attend, as shown in Table 22.

Table 22: Prayer, by attendance

Among adults

AttendancePrayer frequency
A few times a week or moreA few times a monthSeldomNever
Regularly (monthly or more)88543
A few times a year6915125
Seldom4810348
Never2472346
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?
Question: Outside of religious services, how often do you pray?

A more demanding practice, reading religious texts or scripture, does not produce a similarly high reported rate, as 23% say they read scripture often, a number more in line with those who attend weekly services. There is also a sharp decline in reported scripture-reading as attendance declines, unlike the case for prayer.

Table 23: Scripture reading, by attendance

Among adults

AttendanceScripture reading frequency
A few times a week or moreA few times a monthSeldomNever
Regularly (monthly or more)5319217
A few times a year27163719
Seldom965036
Never541675
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?
Question: Outside of religious services, how often do you read scripture?

Faith across generations

To measure how religious attachment flows through life, respondents were asked about their attendance and the importance of religion during their teenage years. This is, of course, a recollection of the past, and not a direct measure from adolescence. Nonetheless, it gives us a look at how religion persists and changes, at least from the respondent’s subjective report.

Religious attendance during adolescence is recalled as being much higher than reported attendance as an adult. While 30% of today’s adults say they attend monthly or more, more than double that, 62%, say they attended at least monthly when 12-17 years old. Likewise, about half as many say they never attended in youth as never attend today. The comparison is shown in Table 24.

Table 24: Attendance as an adolescent and as an adult

Among adults

As adolescent and adultAttendance
Regularly (monthly or more)A few times a yearSeldomNever
As adolescent6213916
As adult30142234
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?
Question: When you were 12-17 years old, how often did you attend religious services?

Early participation in religious services is correlated with adult attendance, if weakly; and more move from regular attendance in youth to seldom or never as adults, than move from seldom or never attending as adolescents to regular attendance as adults, as shown in Table 25.

Table 25: Attendance as an adult, by attendance as an adolescent

Among adults

Attendance as an adolescentAttendance as an adult
Regularly (monthly or more)A few times a yearSeldomNever
Regularly (monthly or more)37152324
A few times a year22212533
Seldom18122742
Never1451466
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services?
Question: When you were 12-17 years old, how often did you attend religious services?

There is a small increase in the percentage of adults who say religion is important in their lives now, compared to whether they say that was the case when they were teenagers.  But there are also a few more for whom religion is not at all important as an adult. See Table 26.

Table 26: Importance of religion as an adolescent and as an adult

Among adults

As adolescent and adultImportance of religion
Very importantSomewhat importantNot too importantNot at all important
As adolescent29292121
As adult36241624
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How important is religion in your life now?
Question: How important was religion in your life when you were 12-17 years old?

Unlike with attendance, the subjective importance of religion as a youth and as an adult is rather strongly correlated. Those who recall religion as very important in the past are quite likely to say it is important now. Those who didn’t think religion was important as a young person are very likely to say it is not important in adulthood. This is shown in Table 27.

Table 27: Importance of religion as an adult, by importance in youth

Among adults

Importance as an adolescentImportance as an adult
Very importantSomewhat importantNot too importantNot at all important
Very important6520105
Somewhat important35361812
Not too important22243024
Not at all important10111069
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How important is religion in your life now?
Question: How important was religion in your life when you were 12-17 years old?

Those who think religion is important to them now are also especially likely to think it is important for children to attend religious services, shown in Table 28.

Table 28: Important for children to attend worship, by importance of religion

Among adults

Importance of religionImportant for youth to attend
Very importantSomewhat importantNot too importantNot at all important
Very important742222
Somewhat important1961155
Not too important840439
Not at all important1102564
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How important is it for children to attend religious services when they are 12-17 years old?
Question: How important is religion in your life now?

People think it is important for children to learn moral values through religion, but substantially more think it is important that children learn moral values apart from religious instruction. The two are not in competition—those who stress moral instruction apart from religion also give more importance to learning values through religion. The comparison is in Table 29.

Table 29: Importance of moral values through and apart from religion

Among adults

Religion or apart from religionImportance learning moral values
Very importantSomewhat importantNot too importantNot at all important
Through religion44281216
Apart from religion711954
Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, June 9-15, 2026
Question: How important is it for children to learn moral values through religion?
Question: How important is it for children to learn moral values apart from religion?

About the Marquette Law School Poll

The survey was conducted June 9-15, 2026, interviewing 1,514 adults nationwide, with a margin of error of +/-2.7 percentage points. For the analysis of married persons, the sample size is 761, with a margin of error of +/-3.8.

Interviews were conducted using the SSRS Opinion Panel, a national probability sample with interviews conducted online. Certain other data from this survey were previously released on June 24, June 25, and July 7. The detailed methodology statement, survey instrument, topline results, and crosstabs for this release are available on the Marquette Law Poll website.


The Marquette Law School Poll has achieved considerable acclaim for its surveys of both Wisconsin and the nation more generally. Launched in 2012, it has become the most extensive statewide polling project in Wisconsin history, setting the standard for measuring public opinion in the state. Since 2019, the Law School’s surveys of national public opinion about the U.S. Supreme Court and selected political issues have expanded the work of the poll both geographically and topically.

This work has been nationally recognized for its accuracy and transparency. Among more than 500 pollsters across the United States, for example, the Marquette Law School Poll has been ranked second by Nate Silver’s Silver Bulletin. FiveThirtyEight.com ranked the poll third, also giving it the nation’s only perfect 10 score for transparency.

Charles Franklin has directed the poll since its inception in 2012. A professor of law and public policy at Marquette Law School, Franklin also served on the ABC News election night Decision Desk from 2002 to 2020. He is a past president of the Society for Political Methodology and an elected fellow of the society; he holds a Ph.D. in political science from the University of Michigan.