11 Signs You Grew Up in a Middle-Class Household

A family stands by a light blue car in a driveway. The father loads a suitcase into the trunk, while the mother and three young children, dressed in 1950s-style clothing, stand nearby in front of a suburban house.
H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock/Getty Images

Growing up in a middle-class family came with an unofficial rulebook — one written in hand-me-downs, store-brand cereal, and thermostat battles. It wasn’t about flashy vacations or the newest gadgets. It was about practicality, routine, and making the most out of what you had. The garage was full of “might-need-this-laters,” birthday parties happened in the backyard, and dining out felt like winning the lottery.

If any of this rings a bell, you might have grown up in the middle class.

1. Your Family Vacations Involved Wheels, Not Wings

Four children sit smiling in the open back of a van, surrounded by a brown stroller and some bags, with green trees visible outside. One child is a baby in the center, while the others are older and appear happy.
middelveld / istockphoto
middelveld / istockphoto

Pack up the kids and load up the station wagon — it’s time for the annual family road trip! If you grew up in a middle-class family, chances are you weren’t taken to the skies to travel somewhere tropical. But Mom and Dad still took you on a trip within driving distance, cramming all your siblings and belongings into the car before takeoff.

2. You Wore Hand-Me-Downs

A person places a folded pair of light-colored shorts into a cardboard box filled with various clothes, next to a beige couch and a patterned rug.
Thai Liang Lim / iStockphoto
Thai Liang Lim / istockphoto

Being the oldest kid in a middle-class family was awesome because you actually got to shop for your clothes. Anyone younger, though, just got your leftovers to wear.

3. You Could See Inside Your Neighbor’s Living Room

A row of single-story suburban houses with manicured lawns, hedges, and clear blue sky in the background. The homes have varied exteriors of brick, stone, and siding.
peterspiro / iStockphoto
peterspiro / istockphoto

Middle-class neighborhoods packed as many houses as they could on a city street, and if you lived in one of these bad boys growing up, you could grab a couple of cans and a string to play “telephone” with your neighbor.

4. Your Skin Stuck to Your Furniture

A living room with red leather chairs, a matching sofa, a TV on a stand, and a wooden coffee table. Yellow blankets are on the furniture, and a flower vase sits beside the TV. The room has patterned wallpaper and curtains.
peterspiro / iStockphoto
peterspiro / istockphoto

Who else had gaudy red, fake leather furniture growing up? 

5. Back-to-School Shopping Had a Strict Budget

A store aisle displays school and office supplies, including notebooks, binders, glue, and art materials. Colorful signs label sections, and a neon pink light decorates the ceiling. A "Buy One, Give One" sign is in the foreground.
u/Djf47021 via Reddit.com
u/Djf47021 via Reddit.com

School shopping was a big to-do in middle-class families. We all looked forward to it, but Mom had a strict budget to follow at the same time. 

6. Eating Out Was a Big Treat

A young man and woman sit at a table with a red and white checkered tablecloth, enjoying pizza in a cozy restaurant with checkered curtains and wood-paneled walls. The woman is taking a bite of pizza and smiling.
u/AxlCobainVedder via Reddit.com
u/AxlCobainVedder via Reddit.com

If you grew up in a middle-class family, you probably weren’t frequenting too many restaurants. When you did go out for dinner, it felt like you were living like royalty for the evening.

7. Your Parents Guarded the Light Switches and Thermostat

A hand is adjusting the settings on a white digital thermostat mounted on a white wall. The display shows current temperature and time, with several buttons below for various functions.
PickStock / iStockphoto
PickStock / istockphoto

Middle-class moms and dads morphed into guard dogs around the light switches and thermostats in the house, making sure kids didn’t let their hard-earned paycheck get swallowed whole by the electric bill.

8. You Had Lots of Chores

A young girl with long brown hair and a yellow headband washes a white plate at a kitchen sink. Sunlight streams through a nearby window, and clean dishes and flowers are on the countertop.
Julia Nikulchenkova / iStockphoto
Julia Nikulchenkova / istockphoto

Free rides were not a thing. Families were all in it together with everyone pitching in to help do the dishes, take out the trash, fold laundry … the list goes on and on. 

9. Your Birthday Parties Were At Home

A woman holds a cake with sparklers in front of a smiling toddler in a high chair, while other children excitedly clap and cheer in a cozy, decorated living room.
middelveld / iStockphoto
middelveld / istockphoto

Happy birthday to you! Another cake in the kitchen with burgers on the grill and a few friends invited over to wear party hats and blow kazoos. 

10. You Had ‘Leftover Night’ 

A plastic container of frozen fried rice with visible ice crystals sits inside a microwave oven on a glass turntable.
Qwart / iStockphoto
Qwart / istockphoto

On Wednesdays, we either had Y.O.Y.O. (you’re on your own) night or we had our pick of all the leftovers in the fridge for dinner.

11. Store Brand Was the Only Brand

Two children sit and play on large bags of Ken-L dog food in a grocery store aisle, with shelves stocked with cereal boxes like Life and puffed wheat behind them. The boy holds balloons featuring cartoon faces.
susierabbit / iStockphoto
susierabbit / istockphoto

Store brand was the way to go if you grew up in the middle class. We can still hear our parents yelling, “It’s the SAME thing!”

Curious how today’s paycheck stacks up?

Compare your earnings with a middle-class salary in every state, revisit 9 things that once defined middle-class success but have all but vanished, and take a visual tour through 10 retro photos of the middle-class American dream.

Author
Rachel Schneider

Rachel is a Michigan-based writer with a bachelor’s degree in Professional Writing and English. Throughout her career, she has dabbled in a variety of subject matter from finance and higher education to lifestyle pieces and food writing. She also enjoys writing stories based on social media trends. Find her on Instagram @rachel.schneider922