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The homeless population tended to be younger than the general population. The average age of a homeless person was 30.5 years compared to the higher 37.4 average age for the general population. There were 4,464 homeless persons in the age group 20-59, accounting for 64.6 per cent of the total homeless count.
Age. Across both household and shelter types, nearly three-quarters of people experiencing homelessness were adults aged 25 or older (428,859 people), 18% were children under the age of 18 (106,364 children).
Young Black people have an 83% higher risk of becoming homeless than their white counterparts. Young Hispanic people have a 33% greater chance of experiencing homelessness than their white counterparts. LGBTQ youths are more than twice as likely to become homeless than other young people.
In 2022/23, 32.1 percent of people seen to be sleeping rough in London were aged between 36 and 45 years old, the most common age group in that year. In this same year, just 8.4 percent of people seen to be homeless were under the aged between 18 and 24, and a further 12 percent were aged over 55.
The National Center on Family Homelessness (NCFH) reported that children experiencing homelessness have three times the rate of emotional and behavioral problems, are four times more likely to show delayed development, and have twice the rate of learning disabilities as other children (NCFH, 2008).
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Past research has assumed a positive correlation between poverty and special education assignment to be appropriate, because children in poverty have experiences (lead exposure, low-birthweight, malnutrition) that tend to be more associated with disability.
Using statewide data, this study found that California students experiencing homelessness achieve and graduate at lower levels and experience more exclusionary discipline than their peers. And while staying in the same school in the face of housing instability makes a positive difference, 20% are unable to do so.
These estimates indicate that approximately one in 10 adults ages 18 to 25, and one in 30 youth ages 13 to 17 will experience homelessness each year.

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