Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The few families I know with 3 kids complain quite a bit about how inconvenient/expensive it is (especially travel, summer camps, and housing once kids are older and want more space). Harder to get a table at a restaurant, harder to figure out hotel rooms, harder to deal with scheduling of activities and school.
So four is definitely a big family, if even families with 3 kids feel squeezed at times.
I’m a mom of three and I wouldn’t consider it “complaining” but it’s definitely true that having three kids is expensive and travel becomes more expensive with three kids because you need a second room. Everything else cost wise is just an incremental kid.
Three kids is a huge time commitment. I’m considering leaving my job because of how busy it is. I definitely consider three to be the threshold of a large family.
At four you really need a stay at home parent.

Anonymous wrote:Curious about this viewpoint for families you meet with 4 and with 5. Pregnant with number 4 now fwiw. I’ve heard this many times over the years.
Is four just more common? I haven’t looked at the numbers.
Anonymous wrote:The few families I know with 3 kids complain quite a bit about how inconvenient/expensive it is (especially travel, summer camps, and housing once kids are older and want more space). Harder to get a table at a restaurant, harder to figure out hotel rooms, harder to deal with scheduling of activities and school.
So four is definitely a big family, if even families with 3 kids feel squeezed at times.
Anonymous wrote:4 kids IS a big family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4 IS a large family. AI says that only 7% of US adults have 4 or more children, a number that stands out even more when you realize that many of those adults are likely in the same families. I’ve always viewed 4 kids as “large” because that’s the point where the whole family can no longer fit in a car together. I guess there’s another “very large” category that’s reached when the whole family can’t fit in a mini-van or SUV together.
That number is 6.
We have a lot of Catholic and Mormon friends and know a lot of families with a large number of children.
IMO, 6 is the tipping point where they really feel different than other families. They have to move from a typical suburban minivan to a weird van. The kids HAVE to share rooms no matter how wealthy the family is. A lot of times they move to a neighborhood where they have a lot of friends that can help each other out. So that means it isn’t just their six kids at home, but often more like 10 kids in the house and yard. They start putting on additions to the house or unusual stuff in the yard because it’s hard to go anywhere.
People start to think you have a lot of kids at 4, but 6 is where you are really different from other families.
An Odyssey will hold 6 kids, but yeah. I don’t get the room sharing point though because a) that tipping point is usually so much lower and b) I had one sibling and we shared a room for years and that seemed normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4 IS a large family. AI says that only 7% of US adults have 4 or more children, a number that stands out even more when you realize that many of those adults are likely in the same families. I’ve always viewed 4 kids as “large” because that’s the point where the whole family can no longer fit in a car together. I guess there’s another “very large” category that’s reached when the whole family can’t fit in a mini-van or SUV together.
That number is 6.
We have a lot of Catholic and Mormon friends and know a lot of families with a large number of children.
IMO, 6 is the tipping point where they really feel different than other families. They have to move from a typical suburban minivan to a weird van. The kids HAVE to share rooms no matter how wealthy the family is. A lot of times they move to a neighborhood where they have a lot of friends that can help each other out. So that means it isn’t just their six kids at home, but often more like 10 kids in the house and yard. They start putting on additions to the house or unusual stuff in the yard because it’s hard to go anywhere.
People start to think you have a lot of kids at 4, but 6 is where you are really different from other families.
Anonymous wrote:4 IS a large family. AI says that only 7% of US adults have 4 or more children, a number that stands out even more when you realize that many of those adults are likely in the same families. I’ve always viewed 4 kids as “large” because that’s the point where the whole family can no longer fit in a car together. I guess there’s another “very large” category that’s reached when the whole family can’t fit in a mini-van or SUV together.
Anonymous wrote:I think 4 is when it becomes large. 3 isn’t large, it’s very average for almost all upper middle class families I know.