YouTube video

Turning 30 has long been considered a milestone. It is the age when many expect lifeโ€™s biggest boxes to be checked: Marriage, children, homeownership and financial stability. 

But for many Black adults today, those expectations collide with new realities. 

While older generations often measure success through traditional markers, millennials and Gen Z professionals are increasingly rewriting the script, balancing family pressure with personal growth, mental health and faith.

Compared to previous generations, the share of young adults reaching these key benchmarks saw a โ€œsignificant drop,โ€ the Census statisticians found.

Roughly 50 years ago, almost half of 25 to 34-year-olds achieved those milestones, which โ€œmark the transition from adolescence to adulthood. ” According to the analysis of the Census Bureauโ€™s American Community Survey data today, less than a quarter have done the same.

A Pew Research Center report indicates that Millennials and Generation Z in the U.S. are reaching family and financial benchmarks later in life than previous generations.

Nana Gyambibi is a Houston-based senior project manager. Credit: Nana Gyambibi

For Nana Gyambibi, a 34-year-old senior project manager and first-generation Ghanian-Sierra Leone-American, the pressure to โ€œarriveโ€ by 30 has always been present.

โ€œOnce people found out I was making six figures, I noticed expectations shifted,โ€ he said. โ€œThere was an assumption that I would now have a certain lifestyle, a wife and children. But Iโ€™ve learned that societyโ€™s timeline doesnโ€™t have to dictate my own.โ€

Raised in a household that valued cultural tradition, Gyambibi admits that breaking away from rigid definitions of manhood hasnโ€™t been easy. Therapy, he said, has been a game changer.

โ€œTherapy is a cheat code to life,โ€ he explained. โ€œIโ€™ve been able to heal, redefine family on my terms and blend cultural traditions in ways that honor my heritage without being trapped by it.โ€

Faith and fatherhood

Quintin Jackson is the CEO of Timeless Media. Credit: Laura Onyeneho

For Quintin Jackson, a 31-year-old father of two and CEO of Timeless Media, the journey has been about reconciling ambition with reality.

โ€œI thought by 30 Iโ€™d have residual income, a home and my family all aligned,โ€ he said. โ€œBut everything hasnโ€™t come together the way I expected.โ€

Jackson says his children and mother motivate him to push through, even when financial and social pressures weigh heavily.

โ€œMy kids are the reason I keep going,โ€ he shared. โ€œAt the same time, the pressure is real. As a Black man, thereโ€™s always the expectation to provide, to prove yourself. But I donโ€™t see feeling stuck as a failure. To me, itโ€™s motivation to keep moving forward.โ€

Jackson’s views on success are rooted in gratitude and faith. 

Jasmin Roberson is a chief brand officer and fashion industry professional. Courtesy: Jasmin Roberson

โ€œSuccess is waking up with breath in my body and knowing God still has a plan for me,โ€ he said. โ€œThe dating scene is tough because entertainment has blurred reality, but through faith, I know love and balance are possible.โ€

On the other side of the spectrum is 36-year-old Jasmin Roberson, chief brand officer and fashion industry professional, who admits that in her 20s, she rushed into marriage under societal pressure.

โ€œI was about to turn 30 and I thought, โ€˜Well, I should be married by now,โ€™โ€ Roberson recalled. โ€œI checked that box, but it wasnโ€™t right for me. I had to learn the hard way that moving at societyโ€™s pace wasnโ€™t worth it.โ€

After building a successful career with brands like Chanel and luxury boutiques, Roberson later remarried, this time after prayer and reflection.

โ€œI realized youโ€™re not going to die if you donโ€™t hit all your goals by 30,โ€ she said with a laugh. โ€œI had to learn to enjoy the present, embrace restarts and ground myself in wellness. Self-care is a non-negotiable for me now.โ€

Expert perspective: โ€œDonโ€™t wait to liveโ€

Dr. Viviana Coles is a prominent licensed marriage and family therapist and certified sex therapist in Houston, Texas. Credit: Dr. Viviana Coles via/ Facebook

According to Dr. Viviana Coles, a licensed therapist and relationship expert, these stories reflect a broader trend among Black singles in their 30s: The weight of generational expectations.

โ€œThereโ€™s an incredible amount of pressure to meet milestones by a certain age and much of it comes from parents and grandparents who grew up with very different realities,โ€

Dr. Viviana Coles

โ€œThereโ€™s an incredible amount of pressure to meet milestones by a certain age and much of it comes from parents and grandparents who grew up with very different realities,โ€ Coles explained. โ€œThey had kids younger, they bought homes earlier and they expect the same. But todayโ€™s singles are navigating student debt, higher costs of living and shifting values.โ€

She says that Black singles often get judged more harshly, particularly women.

โ€œBlack women especially feel the burden of the biological clock and societal pressure to โ€˜do it allโ€™ before itโ€™s too late,โ€ Coles said. โ€œFor men, thereโ€™s pressure too, but it often comes down to providing financially. Both genders experience it, but the weight can look different.โ€

Coles stresses that redefining success is essential. โ€œSuccess doesnโ€™t have to mean marriage and kids by 30,โ€ she said. โ€œFor many singles, success is financial stability, pursuing therapy, or simply being happy with where they are.โ€

She encourages singles to experiment with intentional dating, set boundaries with family and cultivate gratitude.

โ€œDonโ€™t wait to live until youโ€™re in a relationship,โ€ Coles advised. โ€œA lot of the pressure people feel is generational, not universal. What looks like delay might actually be preparation. Live your life fully now and the rest will follow.โ€

I cover Houston's education system as it relates to the Black community for the Defender as a Report for America corps member. I'm a multimedia journalist and have reported on social, cultural, lifestyle,...