People raised in homes where one or both parents had an alcohol use disorder are known as Adult Children of Alcoholics (ACoAs). They face significantly greater risks for anxiety, depression, codependency, and substance use problems. Recognizing how that home environment shaped your thoughts, feelings, and relationships is a powerful step toward lasting change.
What Happens Inside an Alcoholic Home
Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) reshapes family life in every way — from parents’ communication styles and discipline consistency to emotional availability. Such chaos can cause problems in adult life, although children adapt in ways that help them survive their childhoods.
Alcoholic homes typically have several features:
- Unpredictable moods and behavior from the parent who drinks
- Inconsistent rules and poor boundaries
- Emotional or physical neglect during high-stress periods
- Unspoken rules such as “don’t talk, don’t trust, don’t feel”
- Children taking on adult responsibilities through role reversal
Chronic family stress during childhood disrupts the development of secure attachment and healthy emotional regulation. These patterns do not disappear when a child turns 18. They follow people into adulthood and into their relationships.
Common Traits and Patterns in Adult Life
ACoAs do not all share the same experiences or outcomes. Still, research and clinical observation point to several patterns that appear more often in this population.
Emotional and Relational Patterns
- Difficulty trusting others, even people who have earned that trust
- Fear of losing control and compulsive over-responsibility
- People-pleasing and difficulty saying no
- Codependency: placing another person’s needs so far above your own that your sense of worth depends on their approval
- Taking on a caretaker role in adult relationships
Mental Health Risks
ACoAs show higher rates of anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, and loneliness. Research in women from dysfunctional family backgrounds found that loneliness significantly predicted lower life satisfaction and indirect self-harm behaviors. These are not character flaws. They are learned responses to an environment that felt dangerous or unpredictable. Many ACoAs benefit from dual diagnosis treatment when substance use and mental health concerns develop alongside each other.
The Risk of Repeating the Cycle
One of the most important things ACoAs need to know is that their own risk for alcohol or substance use disorder is higher than average. A nationwide study found that adult children of parents with severe alcohol use disorder had a markedly elevated risk of developing their own substance use disorders, particularly when the parent’s condition began early in the child’s life. Reasons for this include genetic vulnerability, learned coping strategies, and the ongoing effects of early stress.
Being aware doesn’t determine your destiny. Knowing your risk allows you to make informed, protective choices. Many ACoAs live full, healthy lives and break the pattern entirely.
Resilience and Protective Factors
Interestingly, research shows that many children growing up with parental alcohol misuse demonstrate strong resilience. Protective factors can moderate risk and support healthy development, even in difficult home environments.
Having access to at least one supportive non-drinking adult, some sense of control, the development of coping skills, and participation in social activities outside the home all reduce long-term harm for adolescents and young adults. This is underscored by an understanding that a parent’s drinking was never the child’s fault or responsibility.
How Therapy Helps Adult Children of Alcoholics
ACoAs can engage in several evidence-based therapeutic approaches, often covered by insurance — including Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Trauma-focused Therapy, and Family Systems Therapy. Most ACoA treatment is outpatient, with weekly sessions. Programs can address co-occurring depression, anxiety, or substance use at the same time.
What Does ACoA Stand For?
ACoA stands for Adult Children of Alcoholics. The term refers to people who grew up in a home where one or both parents had an alcohol use disorder, regardless of whether the parent ever sought treatment. Peer support groups offer connection with others who share similar experiences.
Am I More Likely to Become an Alcoholic Because My Parent Was One?
Your risk is higher than average, but it is not a certainty. Research shows elevated rates of substance use disorders in this population. Awareness, healthy coping skills, and support all significantly reduce that risk. If you’re concerned about your drinking, learning how to safely stop is a good first step.
Virtue Recovery Center offers medical detox for alcohol and residential programs at locations across Nevada, Arizona, Texas, and Oregon.
Whether you’re looking at your own drinking or supporting someone you care about, care is available close to home.
If you or someone you love is ready to stop using and wants to do it safely, our medical detox team is here. We’ll walk you through what to expect, answer your questions honestly, and help you take the first step with the support it deserves.
We operate multiple Joint Commission-accredited facilities across Nevada, Arizona, Texas, and Oregon with a full continuum of care — from residential alcohol treatment programs to PHP, IOP, and outpatient services.
Call us today or verify your insurance online.