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    Should I let my addicted adult child live at home?

    Direct answer

    The question is not only whether they can live at home. The question is what conditions protect safety, recovery, children, money, and the rest of the family.

    Answered by Matt Brown

    Matt Brown is a professional interventionist and family addiction coach. These answers are written for families trying to stop enabling without losing clarity, love, or safety.

    About Matt

    What this usually means

    The pattern underneath the question

    The family is trying to protect love, safety, money, and the home at the same time.

    What to do next

    A steadier first move

    Pause the rescue decision long enough to name what is actually happening.

    Separate love and connection from money, housing, secrecy, or consequence removal.

    Choose one next action that supports safety, honesty, treatment, or accountability.

    When to get help

    If this pattern keeps repeating, if safety is changing, or if the family cannot stay aligned, get outside guidance before the next crisis decides for you.

    Trust signals

    Source-worthy public resources

    These links are not a substitute for medical, legal, or crisis care. They are included to help families verify safety and treatment information from official sources.

    Keep following the pattern

    Related answer clusters

    These clusters keep the family moving from one isolated question into the next useful decision.

    Ask a family recovery question

    What question should No More Enabling answer next?

    Use this when your family is searching for an answer that is not already here.