| Curious how this breaks down. I have two. I’d say 60% of my friends have 2, 30% have 3, and 5% have 1 or 4. |
| I have 2. 2 of my friends have 1, 2 of my friends have 2, 1 of my friends has 3, 1 of my friends has 5 and one has 0. |
| I have one (and am pregnant with a second). None of my close friends have any; a couple of extended friends have 1-2. |
| I can't give you percentages. We have six (two are my step kids). We are friends with people who have none and people who have up to four. |
| We have 4. Most of our friends have 2. A few have 3 or 1. We’re the outliers. |
| Why? |
| We have 3. My friends are about evenly split between 2 and 3. |
| We have 2. Most friends have 2. One has 3. |
| 3. Most of our close friends have 3 or 4. |
| We have one. Probably 80% of friends have 2 or more. The most is 4 in my “good friend” group and not just in a “a kid in my kid’s class whose mom I know has 5 kids” way. |
| I have 3 kids. Most of our friends have 2 kids. A couple have 1, 3 or 4 but I would say 90% of our friends have 2 kids. |
| We're old. But we have four. We're outliers. |
| We have 1. Most of our friends (at least 50%) have 2 kids. Then there is a pretty equal amount of 1 kid and 3 kids for the leftover percent. |
| I have one. All my friends have 2. I’m the only one who had fertility issues. |
| I'm pregnant with our fourth and probably final kid. Our friends have 2-6, if you count pregnancies. Some are done having kids and some are not. Among our kids' friends, a few are from larger families, with the largest being 10. |