Divorce is one of the most serious and life-altering decisions a person can make. When it is truly necessary (due to abuse, chronic betrayal, irreconcilable harm, or complete emotional abandonment), it can be the healthiest path forward. However, many people initiate or accept divorce for reasons that are temporary, fixable, immature, poorly thought-through, or driven by fleeting emotions rather than long-term reality.
Below are 20 common but generally bad / unwise / premature reasons that frequently lead people to divorce — reasons that relationship researchers, couples therapists, divorce attorneys, and post-divorce studies consistently flag as “regrettable” or “avoidable with better tools, timing, or effort.”
These are not judgments on anyone who has divorced — they are patterns seen in hindsight when people later say “I wish I had…” or “I realize now that…”.
Emotional / Impulse-Driven Reasons
- “I’m not ‘in love’ anymore” (without recognizing that romantic infatuation naturally fades and deeper companionate love can be rebuilt).
- “We’ve grown apart” (after years of zero effort to reconnect, date, talk, or try counseling).
- “I found someone who understands me better” (the classic affair-exit fantasy that almost always ends in regret once the new-relationship energy wears off).
- “The spark is gone” (believing marriage should always feel like early dating instead of accepting that long-term love requires maintenance).
- “I deserve to be happy” (used as justification without first trying therapy, separation with intent to repair, or honest communication).
- “I just can’t do this anymore” (said during a temporary crisis — job loss, postpartum depression, teenager rebellion, midlife crisis — without waiting for the storm to pass).
- Revenge or punishment (“They hurt me, so I’ll hurt them by leaving”).
- “Everyone else is getting divorced” (social contagion / keeping-up-with-friends mentality).
Unrealistic Expectations & Lack of Effort
- “Marriage isn’t what I thought it would be” (expecting constant excitement instead of companionship, teamwork, and seasons of hardship).
- Refusing couples therapy because “if we need therapy, it’s already over” (missing the fact that almost every long-term marriage benefits from periodic tune-ups).
- “We fight too much” (without learning healthy conflict skills — most couples fight; the difference is whether they repair afterward).
- “We have nothing in common anymore” (after years of parallel lives and zero shared activities or intentional reconnection).
- Expecting one partner to meet 100% of emotional, social, sexual, intellectual, financial, and spiritual needs (an impossible standard no human can fulfill).
- “I’m bored” (without trying new experiences, date nights, travel, hobbies, or sexual exploration together first).
- Leaving because “I want to find myself” (without first attempting individual therapy while still married).
External Pressure & Poor Timing
- Family or friends constantly saying “you deserve better” (outside voices pushing divorce when the couple hasn’t truly tried everything).
- Divorce during a major life crisis (job loss, death of a parent, serious illness, postpartum period) when emotions are heightened and perspective is distorted.
- Leaving right after a child leaves for college (“empty nest divorce”) without giving the marriage time to re-form as a couple.
- “I stayed for the kids and now they’re gone” (without first trying to rebuild the marriage once the parenting focus shifts).
- Financial windfall or sudden career success prompting “I don’t need this relationship anymore” (status/money change revealing underlying entitlement).
Important Closing Perspective
These are not reasons to stay in dangerous, abusive, chronically betrayed, or soul-crushing marriages.
They are patterns seen in hindsight when people say:
- “I wish we had tried therapy longer.”
- “I left during the worst moment and later regretted the timing.”
- “I expected marriage to always feel like dating.”
- “I didn’t realize how much the kids would suffer.”
- “The new person had the same problems — just with better packaging.”
Divorce is sometimes absolutely necessary and life-saving.
But it is also frequently rushed for reasons that could have been addressed with:
- honest communication
- individual + couples therapy
- temporary separation with clear rules
- behavioral change contracts
- waiting through temporary crises
- rebuilding friendship and intimacy deliberately
If any of these 20 reasons resonate with you right now:
pause.
breathe.
talk to a neutral, skilled therapist (alone first, then together if possible).
give yourself time to separate temporary misery from permanent incompatibility.
You deserve a marriage that is safe, respectful, loving, and joyful.
Sometimes that means leaving.
Sometimes it means fighting harder — together — before you decide.











