Daily life in Proto‑Boleráz settlements would have been shaped by the riverine landscape: seasonal cereals, pulses, and domesticated animals provided staples, while fishing and foraging supplemented diets. Archaeological assemblages from Abony hint at specialized craft production — pottery with complex decoration and occasional copper objects — implying workshops and skilled artisans within villages.
Households likely organized around longhouses or clustered dwellings, with communal spaces for storage and ritual activity. Pit features, some of considerable size, may have served for storage, refuse disposal, or ceremonial deposition; they contribute to an image of layered domestic and communal behaviors. Burials or depositional practices found at the site are limited in number but reveal variable treatment of the dead, suggesting social differentiation or changing mortuary customs.
Evidence points to strong local ties: ceramic styles show regional continuities while also borrowing motifs from neighboring groups. Economic life blended agriculture, craft, and exchange, creating a web of interactions across the Carpathian Basin. However, the small number of human remains analyzed means reconstructions of social structure remain tentative.