70% of Couples Avoid These 4 Critical Relationship Conversations, New Survey of 2,399 Adults Reveals

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What are couples really not talking about?
According to a new Marriage.com survey of 2,399 U.S. adults in committed relationships, 70% of couples avoid at least one major relationship conversation, most commonly about emotions, sex, money, or trust.
While communication is often described as the foundation of a healthy relationship, our findings suggest that avoidance (not arguments) may be the more widespread challenge.
From emotional needs and physical intimacy to financial concerns and jealousy, many couples admit they sidestep the very topics that shape long-term connection and stability.
The data reveals a consistent pattern: difficult conversations aren’t rare. They’re routine, and they often remain unresolved.
In this report, we break down:
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The topics couples avoid most
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Why partners stay silent
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How conflicts typically end
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What happens inside unresolved fights
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And whether couples are taking steps to improve communication
The results paint a revealing picture of modern relationships, one where silence may feel safer in the moment, but carries long-term consequences.
Key statistics at a glance
Here’s what 2,399 U.S. adults in committed relationships told us about communication, conflict, and avoidance:
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70% of couples avoid at least one major relationship conversation
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34% avoid discussing emotions or emotional needs
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33.8% avoid talking about sex or physical intimacy
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28.7% avoid conversations about jealousy or trust
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25.7% avoid discussing money or spending
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40% say old arguments resurface during new fights
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Only 22.9% typically work together to find solutions
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36.5% say one partner shuts down during disagreements
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Nearly 30% report no topic is off-limits
Taken together, the data suggests that while most couples experience communication avoidance, a meaningful minority report full openness, showing that healthier patterns are possible.
1. What topics do couples avoid talking about?
When asked which conversations they tend to avoid, respondents most often pointed to four core relationship areas: emotions, sex, trust, and money.
The most avoided conversations
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Emotions or emotional needs – 34%
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Sex or physical intimacy – 33.8%
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Jealousy or trust – 28.7%
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Money or spending – 25.7%
In short, about 1 in 3 couples avoid talking about emotions or intimacy, and 1 in 4 avoid financial discussions.
Gender differences
Patterns were broadly similar, but with slight variation:
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Men were more likely to avoid sex or intimacy (36% vs. 32% of women).
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Women were slightly more likely to avoid emotions (35% vs. 33% of men).
Relationship stage differences
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Married couples were more likely to avoid money conversations (28%).
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Casually dating individuals were more likely to avoid future plans (26%).
As relationships evolve, so do the topics that feel most difficult. Early-stage couples may hesitate around commitment, while married partners often struggle more with finances and emotional needs.
What this suggests
The conversations couples avoid most – emotions, intimacy, trust, and money – are also the ones most closely tied to long-term satisfaction. Avoidance may feel protective in the moment, but over time, silence can quietly deepen disconnection.
2. Why do couples avoid difficult conversations?
Avoidance isn’t usually about indifference. More often, it’s about fear.
When asked what holds them back from difficult conversations, respondents most commonly cited emotional risk and communication barriers.
The top reasons couples stay silent
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Fear of their partner’s reaction – 29.8%
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Worry the conversation could harm the relationship – 29.2%
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Difficulty putting feelings into words – 30%
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Belief that talking won’t help – 23%
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Feeling overwhelmed – 18.2%
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Fear of rejection or judgment – 16.6%
Nearly 3 in 10 couples avoid tough talks because they fear escalation or damage. Another significant share feel unequipped to express what they’re experiencing.
Gender differences
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Women were slightly more likely to fear their partner’s reaction (31% vs. 28% of men).
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Men were more likely to believe “talking won’t help” (25% vs. 22% of women).
While the reasoning varies slightly, the outcome is the same: difficult emotions remain unspoken.
What this suggests
For many couples, silence is a protective strategy. Avoiding conflict can feel safer than risking misunderstanding, rejection, or escalation.
But when fear replaces dialogue, unresolved emotions don’t disappear, they accumulate. Over time, avoidance can quietly undermine trust, clarity, and emotional intimacy.
The data shows that communication challenges aren’t just about skill. They’re often about vulnerability.
3. How often do couples resolve arguments?
For many couples, disagreements don’t end with clear resolution.
Only 16.5% of respondents said their arguments are always resolved. For the majority, closure is inconsistent:
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18.6% said conflicts often remain unsettled
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Over one-third said this happens sometimes
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18.7% said arguments are rarely resolved
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A small share reported their disputes are never resolved
In short, fully resolved conflict is the exception, not the rule.
When disagreements trail off without closure, the issue itself often isn’t resolved. It’s postponed. And postponed conflicts have a way of resurfacing later.
Differences by gender and relationship stage
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Men were slightly more likely to report that disagreements do not remain unresolved (17% vs. 14% of women), suggesting greater perceived closure.
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Engaged couples stood out, with 26% reporting that arguments often end without resolution, higher than married or dating participants.
This transitional stage may bring added pressure around commitment, expectations, and future planning.
What this suggests
Unresolved conflict appears to be common across relationship types. Even when arguments don’t escalate dramatically, the absence of resolution can create lingering tension.
Over time, unfinished conversations can contribute to recurring fights, emotional distance, and communication fatigue.
The data reinforces a key pattern: it’s not just what couples argue about, it’s whether those arguments truly get resolved.
4. How do couples handle conflict?
When disagreements arise, most couples don’t resolve them collaboratively.
Nearly half default to withdrawal or avoidance:
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36.5% say one partner shuts down or refuses to talk
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13.1% say the issue is sidestepped altogether
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19.1% report that one partner typically “gets their way”
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By contrast, only 22.9% say they usually work together to find a solution.
In other words, fewer than 1 in 4 couples approach conflict as a shared problem to solve.
Gender differences
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Women were slightly more likely to report shutdown behavior (38% vs. 35% of men).
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Men were more likely to report one partner getting their way (21% vs. 17% of women).
While the dynamics differ, the pattern is consistent: collaboration is less common than avoidance or imbalance.
What this suggests
How couples handle conflict may matter more than how often they fight.
Withdrawal, shutdown, or power imbalance can create emotional distance over time, even if arguments don’t escalate dramatically. When disagreements end without teamwork, the issue may fade temporarily, but the underlying tension often remains.
The data highlights a gap between conflict and resolution: many couples argue, but relatively few resolve conflict together.
5. Inside a fight: What happens and why
For many couples, arguments don’t stay contained to the issue at hand.
40% of respondents said old arguments often resurface during new fights, turning present disagreements into recycled battles. Another 29% admitted conflicts sometimes escalate into insults or name-calling.
Emotional overwhelm is also common. 37% said they feel flooded or overwhelmed in the moment.
Other notable patterns:
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18% said one partner walks away or leaves the room
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16% reported shutting down emotionally
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Just 8.5% said they’re able to stay kind or playful during conflict
These patterns suggest that many relationship fights are less about solving a specific problem and more about re-triggering unresolved emotions.
Gender and relationship differences
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Women were more likely to report feeling overwhelmed (40% vs. 34% of men).
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Men were slightly more likely to report resorting to insults (31% vs. 27% of women).
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Engaged couples were most likely to bring old fights into new ones (44%), compared to married couples (38%).
What this suggests
Recurring arguments are rarely about just one issue. When past conflicts remain unresolved, they resurface, often with greater emotional intensity.
As emotions escalate, problem-solving declines. Overwhelm replaces clarity, and old wounds re-enter the conversation.
The data reinforces a broader theme: avoidance and unresolved conflict don’t disappear. They return, often amplified.
6. What do couples do to improve communication?
When couples try to improve communication, most start informally.
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29.4% seek advice from friends or family
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27.7% use self-help resources like books or online content
Fewer turn to structured approaches:
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20.9% set shared communication rules
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14.5% try therapy
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9.5% schedule regular relationship check-ins
Notably, nearly 30% report trying nothing at all to improve communication.
In other words, while many recognize communication challenges, fewer commit to consistent or formal strategies.
Gender and relationship differences
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Women were more likely to use self-help resources (29%).
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Men were more likely to report trying none of the listed strategies (32%).
Married couples were somewhat more likely to adopt structured approaches, while dating couples reported the highest share of taking no action.
What this suggests
There’s a clear gap between awareness and action. Many couples acknowledge communication struggles, but relatively few invest in sustained, collaborative solutions.
The data points to a broader pattern: avoidance is common, resolution is inconsistent, and structured improvement efforts remain underutilized.
Still, the fact that some couples actively set rules, seek guidance, or pursue therapy suggests that healthier communication habits are achievable, when partners choose to engage.
Breaking the silence before it breaks us
Avoiding difficult conversations doesn’t mean couples don’t care. In many cases, it means they care deeply, but feel afraid, overwhelmed, or unsure how to begin.
Yet the data is clear: 70% of couples avoid at least one major relationship conversation, and unresolved issues often resurface in future conflicts. Shutdowns, recycled arguments, and emotional overwhelm are common patterns, not rare exceptions.
Silence may reduce tension in the moment. But over time, avoidance can compound misunderstandings, deepen resentment, and create emotional distance.
There is, however, a hopeful counterpoint.
Nearly 30% of respondents said no topic is off-limits in their relationship, proof that open communication is possible. Some couples are actively setting communication rules, seeking guidance, or pursuing therapy. These efforts suggest that healthier patterns aren’t unrealistic; they’re intentional.
The takeaway isn’t that conflict is the problem. It’s that unresolved conflict is.
Difficult conversations may feel risky, but the greater risk may be leaving them unfinished.
For couples ready to strengthen communication, Marriage.com offers expert-backed guides, tools, and courses designed to help partners navigate tough conversations with clarity and confidence.
Methodology
Marriage.com surveyed 2,399 adults in committed relationships (dating, engaged, cohabiting, or married) in August 2025. Respondents were balanced across age groups, genders, and U.S. regions. Data was collected anonymously through an online questionnaire and analyzed for relationship stage and gender differences.
Margin of error: ±2% at 95% confidence level.
About Marriage.com
Marriage.com is the most trusted resource for relationship wellness, offering expert advice, courses, and tools to help couples build happier, healthier relationships. With a focus on emotional intelligence and real-world challenges, we empower users to thrive in every phase of marriage.
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