Faced with the prospect of spending the pandemic alone, some people have chosen to move in with friends to make quarantining a bit more social.

With experts recommending social distancing, and several states in the US issuing stay-at-home orders, people living alone were faced with the prospect of spending months without seeing a friend or family member in person

So several have made their own temporary households, shacking up with close friends in a new trend that CNN calls 'quaranteaming.'

Quaranteaming: Faced with the prospect of spending the pandemic alone, some people have chosen to move in with friends to make quarantining a bit more social (stock image)

C. Vaile Wright, a psychologist and director of clinical research and quality at the American Psychological Association, told the outlet that quaranteaming is a positive thing to come out of the pandemic.

'This is an example of how resilient people and communities can be,' she said. 'This sense of really thinking about how can we in some ways unconventionally address this challenge together. '

Weight added that, because of these unique circumstances, people are now facing things they took for granted before.

'All these really minor interactions that you never thought about before are now gone. And so we do need to replace them with something,' she went on.

'In some ways this is a huge social experiment about how do we think about our relationships,' she said.

Celebs are doing it! The Bachelorette's Hannah Brown spent a month with contestant Tyler Cameron and his friends at his Jupiter, Florida

Hangin'! They posted pictures goofing around together, and seemed to cook dinner as a group as well. Now, however, she appears to be back in Alabama with her parents

Even celebrities are getting in on the trend. The Bachelorette's Hannah Brown spent a month with contestant Tyler Cameron and his friends at his Jupiter, Florida.

They posted pictures goofing around together, and seemed to cook dinner as a group as well.

Now, however, she appears to be back in Alabama with her parents.

Moving in with friends for a few months seems to be working for the non-famous, too.

Jennica Onstot, 22, usually lives with just one roommate, a person she doesn't know well and doesn't talk to. So for quarantine, she is housing with three of her friends in Olympia, Washington.

'It’s been interesting to move in with them but pretty easy because they all already lived together, and I was over here already pretty much every day it [already],' she told DailyMail.com.

They have figured out a routine, and it helps that they have different schedules.

New roomies! Jennica Onstot, 22, moved in with three of her friends in Olympia, Washington, and said it 'has made seem like living and not just getting through it'

Bro-chelor pad: Fiends and coworkers Charles Lichaa and Lo Noulinthavong, both 30, are currently also living together in the same West Hollywood, California, apartment

'One works mornings during the week, and I work afternoons on the weekends, but we always all have dinner together and are watching a couple of series together!' she said.

'We’ve also started movie series in our down time! School makes it tough, but we all find time to hang out, cook, do homework, and still enjoy each other's time,' she went on. 'We go on walks together or just sit in the backyard in the sun.

'It’s definitely made quarantine so much better,' she added. 'Being surround by friends I love has made seem like living and not just getting through it!'

Meanwhile, friends and coworkers Charles Lichaa and Lo Noulinthavong, both 30, are currently also living together in the same West Hollywood, California, apartment in an effort to make self-isolation a bit more enjoyable.

'I think as a society, we crave human interaction and being around people,' Lichaa — who is selling masks at 8 Other Reasons, with all proceeds going to COVID-19 relief — told CNN.

'Pre-corona, no one wanted to go out, everyone was living on their phones, stimulated by this world that didn't exist. It felt kind of all fake. Now you're forced to be alone, and you realize how much you miss human interaction.'

Moving in: Others have spoken out on Twitter about moving in with friends

Then there's Wilson Li, a University of California, Davis, law student, who packed a suitcase, a carry-on, and a backpack and moved in with his friend Dennis in Seattle a week ago.

The 28-year-old was living alone near campus, but now compares is cohabitating friendship to 'an extended sleepover.'

Soy Nguyen, from of Los Angeles, moved in with a friend about a month ago as well — and she thinks it's been great for her mental health.

'Honestly, if we weren’t quarantined together and kind of lifting each other up, I don’t know how I would hold up,' she told the New York Times.

Others have shared their new living arrangements on Twitter, like a woman who said she'd be going 'crazy' had she stayed alone in her own apartment.