Who It Affects
Research from Harvard, the Cigna Group, AARP, Gallup, and the U.S. Census Bureau paints a consistent picture: loneliness affects every generation, every background, every demographic.
Every Generation Is Affected
Loneliness is not confined to one age group. Every generation faces unique drivers and distinct consequences.
of college students report significant loneliness
The transition to college and early adulthood severs established high school networks. First-generation students, transfer students, and commuter students face even greater isolation. Gen Z has grown up with social media but has fewer close friends than any prior generation. Digital connection does not replace the depth of in-person relationships.
of employees don’t have a work best friend
Geographic relocation for careers, lost college networks, time poverty from demanding jobs, and the rise of remote work have all eroded Millennials’ social infrastructure. Making new friends after 30 requires deliberate effort that most lifestyles don’t accommodate—there’s no built-in social structure like school once provided.
of workers report feeling lonely
Often called the “sandwich generation,” Gen X faces loneliness from multiple directions: divorce, career demands, geographic mobility, and parenting isolation. They carry responsibility for aging parents and growing children while their own social networks thin without them noticing—it happened gradually as life got busier.
adults over 45 experience loneliness (AARP)
Retirement removes the workplace structure that provided daily social contact. Spousal loss, declining health, reduced mobility, and geographic distance from family members compound the isolation. For many, the social network they built over a lifetime shrinks dramatically as friends move away or pass on.
High-Risk Populations
Beyond generational patterns, certain life circumstances create compounding risk for chronic loneliness and social isolation.
Veterans & Active Military
Transition to civilian life, deployment separation, and difficulty relating to non-military peers create deep isolation.
Caregivers
Those caring for chronically ill family members sacrifice their own social connections as caregiving consumes all available time and energy.
People with Disabilities
Physical barriers, accessibility gaps, and social stigma create compounding isolation that limits community participation.
LGBTQ+ Individuals
Those in less accepting areas face rejection from family, community, and institutions that others rely on for connection.
Immigrants & Refugees
Language barriers, cultural displacement, and separation from homeland communities create profound disconnection.
Major Life Transitions
Divorce, job loss, relocation, and other major changes sever existing social networks with no automatic replacement.
Addiction Recovery
Recovery often requires distancing from former social circles, leaving individuals without a support network during their most vulnerable time.
Chronic Illness
Physical limitations, fatigue, and the unpredictability of chronic conditions make maintaining social connections extremely difficult.
No Demographic Is Immune
Marital status, race, health, caregiving—no demographic line shields anyone from loneliness. The crisis is universal.
Loneliness cuts across every boundary we use to define ourselves—age, race, health, relationships, geography. It is a shared human vulnerability. And because it's universal, the solution must be accessible, adaptable, and deeply empathetic.
Understanding who it affects is just the beginning.
The Impact & Path Forward