At Ain Ghazal, everyday life would have been shaped by a tight weave of domestic tasks, craft production, and communal ritual. Archaeological excavations reveal tightly packed houses with prepared plaster floors, storage pits, and hearths—evidence of household economies centered on cultivated cereals and pulses, supplemented by managed caprines and wild resources. Lime plaster, produced in large quantities, attests to investment in durable domestic spaces and ritual objects; Ain Ghazal is famed for its large plaster human figures, which evoke significant communal or ancestral practices.
Material traces indicate specialized activities: flint tool production, weaving, and ceramic precursors in the form of sealed storage. Burial and depositional practices were varied; some human remains were curated or modified, suggesting complex mortuary rites and memory practices. The density of the settlement implies cooperative management of water, storage, and craft production—social arrangements that likely required negotiated leadership and repeated ceremonial gatherings.
Archaeological data indicates an economy neither fully settled like later agrarian states nor wholly mobile; instead, these communities practiced an adaptive blend of cultivation, husbandry, and exchange. Limited botanical and faunal remains provide glimpses into diet and seasonal rhythms, but many aspects of social hierarchy and gender roles remain interpretive and subject to further study.