Study: There's a good chance Connecticut millennials live with parents

Where millennials are most likely to live at home

10. Pennsylvania

2014: 34.1 percent of young people living with at least one parent 2000: 27.1 percent of young people living with at least one parent Where millennials are most likely to live at home

10. Pennsylvania

2014: 34.1 percent of young people living with at least one parent 2000: 27.1 percent of young people living with at least one parent Photo: Jose Fuste Raga, Getty Images Photo: Jose Fuste Raga, Getty Images Image 1 of / 29 Caption Close Study: There's a good chance Connecticut millennials live with parents 1 / 29 Back to Gallery

Millennials currently being told to turn down the music are not alone in the state of Connecticut.

A recent study from the Pew Charitable Trust indicates that 20- and 30-somethings in Connecticut are among states where millennials most likely live at home.

Looking at 2014 census reports, the state saw a drastic increase in the number of 18- to 34-year-olds living at home with at least one parent between 2000-2014, climbing from 25.4 to 38.8 percent. The state was second to only New Jersey, who sat at 43.9 percent.

Check out the slideshow above to see where Connecticut ranks among other states where millennials likely live with mom and dad.

Pew's study also found the first time since the 1880 in America that 18- to 34-year-olds were more likely to live at home with their parents than alone or with a spouse.

One cause may be high rent, according to the study.

"The high cost of homeownership is also a factor. Renters who might otherwise be homeowners end up renting longer, tying up the supply for those coming up behind them," the study wrote.

And, unfortunately for those planning on going back to school, a college degree can't break through the housing market, the study added.

"Millennials are the most educated generation ever," Pew wrote. "But in areas where housing is extraordinarily expensive, a college degree is not necessarily a ticket out of your childhood bedroom."

Related: How much does it cost to rent in southwestern Connecticut

Finances and the housing market aren't the only factors to consider though. Some instances could be a case of overprotection.

"You just have to be careful that you're not enabling [millennials] to avoid going out on their own when they're ready," Debbie Pincus, a psychotherapist, told Pew. "We baby boomers are very protective of our children. We are less likely to put the kids out and say, 'Figure it out for yourselves.'"

It's another cog in recent findings of how the nation's newest adults are finding their way in today's world. Recently, another study found that millennial are generally a bunch of "job-hoppers," bouncing job to job.