I think big planned "slumber parties" with like six or more kids usually stop around age eleven or twelve for most kids. But spending the night at a friend's house, just two or three of you, is never not OK for young adults. I think when you're in your twenties you'll naturally stop seeing your friends as much as you drift apart in/after college. You'll be starting relationships/careers and moving.
And I agree with the distinction between "sleep over" and "stay over". If your friend has to crash on your couch at your apartment, that's not a "sleep over". Sleep-overs have movies, truth or dare, pillow fights, popcorn, scary stories, gossip, etc.
When should you stop having sleepovers with your friends?
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I think big planned "slumber parties" with like six or more kids usually stop around age eleven or twelve for most kids. But spending the night at a friend's house, just two or three of you, is never not OK for young adults. I think when you're in your twenties you'll naturally stop seeing your friends as much as you drift apart in/after college. You'll be starting relationships/careers and moving.
And I agree with the distinction between "sleep over" and "stay over". If your friend has to crash on your couch at your apartment, that's not a "sleep over". Sleep-overs have movies, truth or dare, pillow fights, popcorn, scary stories, gossip, etc.