Disaster American Women Are Giving Up on Marriage - womxn would rather be single rather than compromise


After a handful of underwhelming relationships and dozens of disappointing first dates, Andrea Vorlicek recently called off the search for a husband.

The 29-year-old always thought she’d have found her life partner by now. Instead, she’s house hunting solo and considering having kids on her own.

“I’m financially self-sufficient enough to do these things myself,” said Vorlicek, a Boston-based accountant. “I’m willing to accept being single versus settling for someone who isn’t the right fit.”
She sees her plans for an independent future as making the best of a lousy situation. “I don’t want to sit here and say I’m 100% happy,” Vorlicek said. “But I feel happier just accepting my reality. It’s mentally and emotionally a sense of peace.”
American women have never been this resigned to staying single. They are responding to major demographic shifts, including huge and growing gender gaps in economic and educational attainment, political affiliation and beliefs about what a family should look like.
“The numbers aren’t netting out,” said Daniel Cox, director of the survey center at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), a conservative think tank. He ticked off the data points: More women than men are attending college, buying houses and focusing on their friendships and careers over dating and marriage.
Stories of women complaining about the lack of quality men have long infused pop culture—from “Pride and Prejudice” to Taylor Swift’s oeuvre. Yet women throughout history rarely questioned whether finding and securing a romantic partner should be a primary goal of adulthood.

This seems to be changing. Over half of single women said they believed they were happier than their married counterparts in a 2024 AEI survey of 5,837 adults. Just over a third of surveyed single men said the same.

A 2022 Pew survey of single adults showed only 34% of single women were looking for romance, compared with 54% of single men, down from 38% and 61% in 2019. Men were also more likely than women to say they were worried that nobody would want to date them.

A rise in earning power and a decline in the social stigma for being single has allowed more women to be choosy. “They would rather be alone than with a man who holds them back,” Cox said.

For young women especially, who tout their “boy sober” and off-the-market status on TikTok and other social media, the focus has shifted toward self-improvement, friendship and the ability to find happiness on their own. Surveys show a decline in teenage relationships, and Gen Z is having less sex than previous generations, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


Crisis of connection​

The share of women ages 18 to 40 who are single—that is, neither married nor cohabitating with a partner—was 51.4% in 2023, according to an analysis of census data by the Aspen Economic Strategy Group, up from 41.8% in 2000.

These numbers don’t specify whether women are looking for love or swearing it off, but more-nuanced surveys show that single women appear less interested in getting married now than they used to be. They also seem less keen on getting hitched than their male peers.

In a 2023 Pew Research Center survey of 5,073 U.S. adults, 48% of women said that being married was not too or not at all important for a fulfilling life, compared with 39% of men—up from 31% and 28% in 2019. In a 2024 Wall Street Journal/NORC poll, 58% of women aged 18 to 29 said marriage was at least somewhat essential to their vision of the American dream, compared with 66% of men.

Marriage rates for both men and women are in decline, in part owing to less pressure to pair off and higher expectations for a would-be match. “Dating apps make people feel like there might always be a better option,” said Melissa Kearney, an economist at the University of Maryland. “They view looking for a marriage partner the same way that you view looking for a job candidate.”

But men seem more satisfied with their options than women. A 2023 AEI survey of college-educated women found that half blamed their singlehood largely on an inability to find someone who meets their expectations. Less than a quarter of single men said the same.

“To the extent that some women are staying single because this is what they want, that’s great,” said Kearney. “But we have to take seriously the likelihood that many are doing it as a Plan B because they’re not finding what they’re looking for, and that should make us concerned.”

‘Boyfriends by Christmas’​

Last year, Michele Kirsch told her three adult daughters she wanted them to have “boyfriends by Christmas.” She had a dream, she had told them, that each of them was standing in front of the lit-up tree next to “a hunk who liked to ski and went to a good school.”

This dream went unfulfilled, admitted Katie Kirsch, who is 30 and runs Lume, a leadership coaching startup, out of New York City. “Maybe we’re doing it wrong.”
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Katie spent the first half of 2024 going on three or four dates a week with men she met on apps, such as Hinge and Bumble, in the hopes of finding a husband before turning 30. By the end of the year, she had ramped down the search, calling it “the only thing you can put 10,000 hours into and end up right where you started.”

Many of the men Katie met, she said, either seemed turned off by her ambition or weren’t career-oriented enough for her. She felt discouraged by just how many of her male friends similarly said they expect their future wives to prioritize their families over their jobs.

Yet Katie’s luck may be changing. She recently started dating a man she was set up with who seems both interested in starting a family and supportive of her career. She admitted she was wary at first: “I thought it was too good to be true.”

The challenges of finding a romantic partner have been made more complicated by a growing divide in education and career prospects between men and women. In 2024 47% of American women ages 25-34 had a bachelor’s degree, according to Pew, compared with 37% of men. A bachelor’s degree increases net lifetime earnings by an estimated $1 million, according to a 2024 report from Georgetown University.

“Women are doing comparatively well when it comes to education and their early years in the labor force, and men are doing comparatively badly,” said Brad Wilcox, a fellow at the conservative Institute for Family Studies and a sociology professor at the University of Virginia. “That creates a mismatch, because people prefer to date in terms of comparable education or income.”

Men’s economic struggles seem to be having the biggest effect on women without a college degree, whose marriage rates by age 45 have plummeted from 79% to 52% for those born between 1930 and 1980, according to research by Cornell University economist Benjamin Goldman. “Young men without a degree are struggling so much as a group that there simply aren’t enough with steady jobs and earnings for non-college women to date,” said Goldman.

For Christina Ralstin, a 31-year-old wildland firefighter in rural Republic, Wash., who didn’t go to college, buying a house was confirmation she didn’t need a partner to be content. She paid $90,000 for a two-bedroom on half an acre of land in 2022.

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“I’ll have it paid off in the next two years, so I don’t feel like I need to be tied financially to somebody,” Ralstin said. After her last relationship ended in 2023—when she discovered he was still on Tinder—she doubted she would find someone else who aligned with her progressive views in her conservative town. So she stopped looking. “If I need companionship, I volunteer at the dog shelter.”

Single people in large cities where home prices have surged in recent years are finding that their marital status has hampered their finances. Although the wealth gap between single men and women appears to be shrinking, real-estate prices have helped drive a near doubling of the wealth gap between singles and couples from 2010 to 2022.

Married couples had $393,000 in median wealth in 2022, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve, while unmarried people, including those who were partnered but not married, had $80,000. Economists say married couples are more likely to have assets such as homes and cars, which have grown in value faster than wages in recent years.

Different world views​

For Alicia Jones, not having anyone else to financially depend on—or split rent with—is the worst part of being single. “Especially with the threat of layoffs, it’s much more stressful being a single person,” said Jones, who is 38 and works in communications for a real-estate company in Washington, D.C.

Her last long-term relationship ended two years ago over conflicting views of their shared future. “He wanted the white picket fence and me at home with the kids,” Jones said. This despite the fact that her salary was nearly 50% higher than his.

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Jones, who identifies as politically moderate, thinks couples with kids should split household and child care responsibilities equally. She was surprised by just how few of the men she has encountered in D.C. share this view. Either they held traditional ideas about marriage or “were extremely crunchy liberal and wanted to live in a van and drive across the country.”

Before she pulled back from dating last year, Jones tried her luck at a singles event. She left with three numbers—all belonging to women who became friends, whom she now meets for drinks or dinner multiple times a month. The men at the event, the four women agreed, seemed more interested in the brewery’s board games than in the people in the room, so they spent the night getting to know one another instead.

A growing political divide between men and women has compounded the challenges of finding love. Around 39% of women ages 18 to 29 identified as liberal in 2024, according to Gallup, compared with 25% of their male peers. This gap has more than tripled in a decade: 32% of women and 28% of men called themselves liberal in 2014.

These differences aren’t merely about preferences or votes, explains University of Denver psychology professor Galena Rhoades, who researches romantic relationships. Rather, politics have become an expression of one’s “core values” about everything from economic inequality to bodily autonomy. “They are reflective of people’s world views,” said Rhoades.

The latest presidential election and the first months of the Trump administration have intensified this ideological rift.

Rachael Gosetti, a 33-year-old real-estate agent in Savannah, Ga., said she broke up with her boyfriend, with whom she shares a 5-year-old son, over a year ago because she was tired of doing most of the child care, cooking and scheduling while also earning almost double her boyfriend’s salary. She has yet to date anyone else in part because she worries about living in a red state with a six-week abortion ban. “I have a child that I can’t leave behind to drive to Virginia if I had a pregnancy scare, and I definitely can’t afford another child as a single mom,” she said.

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Others are intentionally heading into motherhood solo.
Tina Noohi, who is 34 and works for a health startup, still hopes that one day she’ll be swept off her feet. But she says she has spent much of the past year trying to talk herself out of her fantasies of a romantic happy ending.
Realizing she was rushing into relationships out of fear of running out her biological clock—and that her favorite part of dating had become debriefing with her friends the next day—she decided to separate her desire to find a partner from her desire to become a mom.
Noohi, who splits her time between New York City and San Diego, has lately spent hours researching the “Single Mothers by Choice” movement and started saving for a baby with a high-yield savings account. “Parenthood and romantic love don’t have to be intrinsically linked,” she said.
The only hurdle: Getting her traditional family on board.
“At first they tried to convince me that I still had plenty of time to find somebody,” said Noohi. “But they seem to have come around.”
Rachel Wolfe is a reporter covering the economy for The Wall Street Journal.
Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Appeared in the March 22, 2025, print edition as 'American Women Are Giving Up on Marriage Women Without Men'.
 
This sounds exhausting and pointless. You can’t pick a partner out of a catalogue or on a short dinner date. You need to spend time and get to know each other. I find this dating culture really baffling and off putting. Maybe some people see someone across a crowded room and know they’re the one but the rest of us might like to spend perhaps a few weeks getting to know someone before deciding whether they’d like to go out for dinner. It’s like repeating a word out loud until it loses all meaning - at a couple of hundred dinner dates aren’t you going to accept that the pool you’re fishing in is wrong ?
And yes @Lidl Drip is right - if you’re doing a full time job and all the cooking and childcare your other half is not pulling their weight. If both of you work, Both of you do the housework and domestic stuff.
Online dating was a lot of fun but it was not particularly helpful in finding a long term partner. They really gain nothing by creating healthy long term relationships.

As far as division of labor I feel like most issues come from people not being willing to sit down and say, "This is what you do and this is what I do and we have to keep each other to it." Possibly because they lack the communication skills to do it without a fight ensuing. I dunno. People talk a lot but rarely about the framework of their relationships.
 
men are, according their frequently stated beliefs, the more disposable and desperate sex yet they can't find one
who is the dead end here?
>muh single motherhood through sperm donor or glorified sperm donor
...so your response to dysfunction is further dysfunction?
This is literal dysgenics.

I am reminded of this even though it's like half relevant.
View attachment 7127364
The entire idea that everything you do is ackshully eugenics is the funniest fucking shit.

I am still laughing my fucking ass off that the most affected group of people were negresses from USAID. I am going to fucking laugh even harder when the results come back from this cut.
>point out that men who obsess over hating women online are doing 90% of the work that keeps them lonely

“Suffah moids! The future is female!”


>point out that the women doing the same thing but backwards are just as insufferable and unfuckable


“Nuh uh you’re just mad and I’m definitely not showing my unconscious self hatred by obsessively posting about it in comment threads for a forum about retards and their escapades!”



Femcels and incels are two sides of the same unfuckable coin who deserve each other.
 
“I’m financially self-sufficient enough to do these things myself,” said Vorlicek, a Boston-based accountant. “I’m willing to accept being single versus settling for someone who isn’t the right fit.”
She sees her plans for an independent future as making the best of a lousy situation. “I don’t want to sit here and say I’m 100% happy,” Vorlicek said. “But I feel happier just accepting my reality. It’s mentally and emotionally a sense of peace.”
Same, dear, same. I've been burned by women once too often and I prefer to stay alone now. No need to argue why I have to do long hours or go on business trips for two months; that's always a painful chore to explain the hows and whys, it's like people are too retarded at times to understand why things need to be done at work. And I don't think my career is that important. It is not, but I'd like to have my financial independence.
In a 2023 Pew Research Center survey of 5,073 U.S. adults, 48% of women said that being married was not too or not at all important for a fulfilling life, compared with 39% of men—up from 31% and 28% in 2019. In a 2024 Wall Street Journal/NORC poll, 58% of women aged 18 to 29 said marriage was at least somewhat essential to their vision of the American dream, compared with 66% of men.
Yet, I am horrified by these numbers. There might be a hidden, unknown point after which society simply falls apart in quick succession. When that happens, say good bye to dating apps and work life balance.
 
Here's an idea:

Everyone, regardless of sex, should finance and plan their life with the concept that they're going to do it solo. Then, if they meet someone, that person is an added bonus to an already successful life rather than being burdened with a lot of expectations and financial demands that have nothing to do with love or romance. The new couple can then COMPROMISE their individual plans and redistribute their resources in order to come up with a group plan that's to their mutual benefit.
 
I love how the same retarded shit gets said every time an article like this pops up. If you want to have a shiggle. Go 50 pages back on the Articles tab and click the first similar sounding article. Nothing's changed.
I would tell you guys to get a room but there is a legal limit to how many whiny bitches you can fit in one room.
 
This sounds exhausting and pointless. You can’t pick a partner out of a catalogue or on a short dinner date. You need to spend time and get to know each other. I find this dating culture really baffling and off putting. Maybe some people see someone across a crowded room and know they’re the one but the rest of us might like to spend perhaps a few weeks getting to know someone before deciding whether they’d like to go out for dinner. It’s like repeating a word out loud until it loses all meaning - at a couple of hundred dinner dates aren’t you going to accept that the pool you’re fishing in is wrong ?
And yes @Lidl Drip is right - if you’re doing a full time job and all the cooking and childcare your other half is not pulling their weight. If both of you work, Both of you do the housework and domestic stuff.

I always find it comes down to women being more neurotic than men - there's not some huge trend of single dudes being found under piles of trash and unwashed dishes, it's just women want a pristine home they can show off and brag about and fellas are happy enough with a home that's clean enough to not attract vermin and have plates available without having to wash them

In this case I feel it's fair women take on the extra work that they are driving the demand for, or accept living to a male standard. It's like buying a Ferrari on finance and complaining your girlfriend/wife is paying less towards the payments and it's like erm yes you're the one who chose to impose the burden of your expensive car, no shit you should be paying more for it

Tbf I think a lot of problems would be solved if people just stopped jumping to the next relationship a few months after the last one ended. Take a year out and learn to be happy by yourself and deal with your own needs and problems and insecurities then try actually connecting with someone. Dating 3-4 people a week and expecting a long term relationship out of that is crazy
 
Online dating was a lot of fun but it was not particularly helpful in finding a long term partner. They really gain nothing by creating healthy long term relationships.

As far as division of labor I feel like most issues come from people not being willing to sit down and say, "This is what you do and this is what I do and we have to keep each other to it." Possibly because they lack the communication skills to do it without a fight ensuing. I dunno. People talk a lot but rarely about the framework of their relationships.
If only there was a division we used for most of human history that made some sort of logical sense since two people can't be at home at once....
Anyway, I have no interest in the vain proposition that housework chores are somehow just as hard as working a 9(6)-5(6) labor job (these mean overtime if you're never worked it in your life). If you are of either sex and think it is, I will laugh at you because obviously living alone would be the most miserable worldly experience and not something almost everyone wants in their early life. If you can't sort out at least two things (cooking, cleaning, laundry, taking out trash, or sorting shit you have laying around) when you come home from work or before you go to it you're a failure of a human being. Delegating these between yourself and someone else should be the easiest thing in the world. If it's honestly a huge issue for one of you and if you can't do either you need to change or find someone else.
I always find it comes down to women being more neurotic than men - there's not some huge trend of single dudes being found under piles of trash and unwashed dishes, it's just women want a pristine home they can show off and brag about and fellas are happy enough with a home that's clean enough to not attract vermin and have plates available without having to wash them
Thank you.
Take a year out and learn to be happy by yourself and deal with your own needs and problems and insecurities then try actually connecting with someone.
The amount of people who can't stand more than a minute of sweet silence is genuinely disturbing.
 
I don't see how, why do you think so? Within one generation the unfuckable genes will be gone.
  1. Nature vs Nurture, there are some men with bad genes that will procreate due to luck and a good upbringing, just as they are men with excellent genes that wil not procreate due to outside influences
  2. Women carry Incels genes too, almost all of them since their grandmothers couldn't select so it will take a while to dilute these genes
What's antagonistic about asking men to help doing domestic labor when both partners are working? The fact you see it that way is exactly why women are opting out of dating men like you. Women have tried for years to get men to help them and be decent partners, it just isn't happening.
If you were the head of any western country, what would you change?
 
But typically even in that situation you will have women who will stream I"M THE BOSS BECAUSE I MAKE MORE MONEY THAN YOU DO. They will demand that you be the trad wife for them because THEY MAKE MORE MONEY THAN YOU. They will bitch and bitch all day long about how you need to do more work around the house while they lay on their fat ass doing nothing.
Yeah @The Crack Spiders Bitch what you failed to realize is that men don't care how much money women make. That's cool for flexing to other women but it's not really something guys look at. If you don't have a gorrillion dollars in debt your income doesn't become relevant again until you're an heiress.
 
Yeah @The Crack Spiders Bitch what you failed to realize is that men don't care how much money women make. That's cool for flexing to other women but it's not really something guys look at. If you don't have a gorrillion dollars in debt your income doesn't become relevant again until you're an heiress.
That wasn't the point.
The point was "I work 9-12 hour shifts, I get paid more than you. Why the fuck is the housework solely being done by me?"

Men always make the "men are the breadwinners" but you're not.
We out earn men.
If men don't make incomes to support the household, why is housework still women's responsibility?
 
The older I get, the more shit I read/see, the more I think...maybe the old obnoxious, overbearing family model was best. Maybe oppressive society made better families in the long run.

Your mother would get together with your aunts and grandma, then get straight into your business not long after puberty. They'd blab about all the other families in your neighborhood and church, trying to figure out where they should push you to date. They'd wear your ass down until they found a boring (but reliable) wife/husband for you.

You'd spend your Friday nights at the bowling alley with the your mates, talking about the good old days you never really had. But then you'd go home to your sweet boring wife and your three mostly-loving children.
 
I'm enjoying the crying about how women are all used up in their late 20s and will be miserable even though women are happier and choosing to have babies using sperm donors.
None of these whiny males bothered to read the article. Women are opting out and you're all sulking about it.
Sucks to suck I guess.

Jamie, pull up the male suicide numbers and male loneliness statistics:
Higher and higher.png
 
The point was "I work 9-12 hour shifts, I get paid more than you. Why the fuck is the housework solely being done by me?"
He doesn't care that you get paid more is my point.
Guys are raised with the expectation that they tend to themselves, so whatever you're bringing in is this nebulous entity in his mind that disappears at any time when you leave. It doesn't factor into him concluding he needs to be more or less involved in housework. That and he probably underestimates how much of a pita it can be, knowing how bachelors live.
But "I pull in the big scratch" is never going to be an effective argument with guys because it doesn't matter and they base their plans on what they van manage for themselves and not what their girlfriends can do for them, in no small part because of how instantly the it'd be brought up if they were reliant on her money.
 
The older I get, the more shit I read/see, the more I think...maybe the old obnoxious, overbearing family model was best. Maybe oppressive society made better families in the long run.
I think couples definitely survived better when extended family close by was the norm than when the nuclear family became the norm.
 
Instead of having to get married to get money from men, women simply let the government steal money from men on their behalf and give nothing in return. Why would they give that up?
What they'll do when they'll ran out of men? Just imagine them trying to run the printer to print money.

Btw, lots of cats will be happy to see these women turning into cat ladies.
 
He doesn't care that you get paid more is my point.
And women don't care about living with useless eaters was the major part of my point.
Did you read the article?

Women are opting out of relationships because men add nothing to our lives.
You don't help and your monetary contributions are negligible.
Why the fuck should we bother?
Guys are raised with the expectation that they tend to themselves
Absolute lunacy.
Men are complaining non stop that their mommy mcbangmaids don't pick up after them. In a relationship, they expect YOU to wash their dishes and cook and clean and do the laundry.

If men are so independent, why are they expecting their wives and GFs to pick up after them?
 
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