---
slug: why-swinger-couples-dont-divorce
title: What Research Suggests About Swinger Relationship Stability
description: >-
  Do swinger couples have stronger relationships? We examine what researchers
  actually know — and don't know — about CNM couples and relationship stability.
publishedAt: '2017-03-03T20:30:41+00:00'
updatedAt: ''
author: swing-editorial
categories:
  - swinger-couple
tags:
  - couples-advice
  - open-relationship
  - communication
  - lifestyle-basics
  - jealousy-management
  - community
heroImage: >-
  /blog/images/why-swinger-couples-dont-divorce/why-swinger-couples-dont-divorce.jpg
heroAlt: >-
  Black-and-white close-up of a man and woman kissing softly, faces pressed
  together in profile
wordCount: 994
readingTime: 4
takeaways:
  - >-
    Comparative divorce-rate statistics for swinger vs. monogamous couples are
    not established by rigorous peer-reviewed research — such claims should be
    treated with appropriate skepticism.
  - >-
    Research summarized by the Kinsey Institute and Archives of Sexual Behavior
    does find that CNM couples often report high relationship satisfaction and
    robust communication practices.
  - >-
    Transparency, jealousy management, and ongoing boundary renegotiation are
    the relationship skills most associated with long-term success in the
    lifestyle.
  - >-
    The lifestyle works best as an enrichment of an already stable partnership,
    not a remedy for existing conflict.
  - >-
    Swing.com's community and profile tools give couples a structured way to
    explore at their own pace, with verified connections from the start.
faq:
  - question: Do swinger couples really have lower divorce rates?
    answer: >-
      The claim circulates widely, but no peer-reviewed study has established a
      reliable comparative divorce-rate figure between swinging couples and the
      broader population. The research on CNM relationship outcomes that does
      exist — primarily from the Kinsey Institute, Archives of Sexual Behavior,
      and Journal of Sex Research — focuses on relationship satisfaction,
      communication quality, and wellbeing rather than marital dissolution
      statistics. The honest answer is that the research is not settled.
  - question: Does swinging count as cheating or infidelity?
    answer: >-
      No. Swinging requires mutual consent and full transparency between
      partners. Infidelity involves concealment — one partner acting without the
      other's awareness or agreement. In consensual non-monogamy, every
      encounter is negotiated, agreed upon, and openly known to both partners.
      That structural difference is not a technicality; it shapes the entire
      emotional and relational dynamic of how the lifestyle functions.
  - question: What relationship skills does swinging actually develop?
    answer: >-
      Couples in the lifestyle consistently develop explicit communication about
      desires and limits, structured jealousy-management practices, the ability
      to renegotiate boundaries over time, and the habit of aftercare
      conversations — checking in with each other after encounters to address
      anything that felt different than expected. These skills benefit the
      primary relationship directly, regardless of how active the couple remains
      in the lifestyle long-term.
---
The headline has been repeated so often it has taken on the quality of fact: [swinger couples](/blog/4-facts-about-kissing-why-some-swinger-couples-opt-out) don't divorce. It's a compelling claim, and there's something intuitively understandable about why people reach for it. But it's worth pausing on [what the research actually](/blog/shocking-bisexual-survey) shows — and what it doesn't — before treating a culturally satisfying narrative as established science.

## What the Research Actually Establishes

No peer-reviewed, methodologically controlled study has produced a reliable comparative divorce rate between swinging [couples and the](/blog/swinger-couples-explore-the-kama-sutra-sex-positions) general population. The claims that circulate online typically trace back to self-selected surveys, anecdotal community data, or popular summaries that overstate their source material's conclusions. That doesn't mean those sources have nothing useful to say — it means their findings should not be treated as settled quantitative fact.

What research from institutions including the Kinsey Institute and Archives of Sexual Behavior does consistently find is something genuinely interesting: couples practicing [consensual non-monogamy](/blog/monogamy-is-dead-time-to-swing) — including swinging — often report high relationship satisfaction, robust communication practices, and psychological wellbeing broadly comparable to their satisfied monogamous peers. Work described by researchers Moors, Conley, and Haupert on post-2020 CNM populations confirms this general pattern, without claiming a specific [comparative dissolution](/blog/why-swinging-couples-rarely-divorce) rate.

The honest framing is this: the relationship skills that the lifestyle demands — transparency, [jealousy management](/blog/4-characteristics-that-define-swinger-relationships), ongoing consent negotiation — are skills that researchers associate with relationship quality across structures. Whether those skills translate to lower divorce rates compared to the broader population has not been rigorously measured.

## Is the Research Settled?

No. The CNM research literature is relatively young, self-selected samples are difficult to avoid given the social stigma of disclosure, and tracking dissolution rates requires longitudinal methodology that most lifestyle studies haven't employed. Future research may clarify the picture. For now, treating any specific percentage as an established finding would be misleading.

## Why Transparent Communication Matters

What does hold up across the research is this: couples who navigate consensual non-monogamy successfully tend to be exceptionally good at communicating — and that's both a prerequisite and a product of the lifestyle.

Before any encounter, there's negotiation about what's wanted, what's off-limits, and what counts as a green light vs. a pause. During the lifestyle, there's ongoing check-in as boundaries evolve. After encounters, there's what the community often calls aftercare conversations — a partner-specific debrief about what felt good, what felt different than expected, and whether anything needs to change going forward. Research summarized by the Journal of Sex Research notes that people in consensually non-monogamous relationships communicate about desires and limits more explicitly and more frequently than monogamous peers — not as a rarity but as a structural requirement.

That communication infrastructure has real effects on relationship quality. Partners who have practiced saying "I need to revisit this boundary" and "that felt different than I expected" in the lifestyle context tend to bring the same directness to ordinary relationship maintenance.

## Jealousy Is Real — and Manageable

One of the more honest acknowledgments the lifestyle community makes is that jealousy doesn't disappear because both partners have consented to an arrangement. It shows up, sometimes unexpectedly, often triggered by things that weren't predicted in the pre-encounter negotiation.

What differs among couples who navigate the lifestyle successfully is not the absence of jealousy — it's the presence of a framework for handling it. Research summarized by the Archives of Sexual Behavior on jealousy management in open and swinging relationships finds that the strategies people develop aren't magic: they involve naming the feeling, tracing it to its actual source (which is often not what it appears to be), checking in with the primary partner, and renegotiating if needed.

Couples who approach jealousy as information rather than indictment — information about what matters, what feels threatening, what needs more conversation — tend to navigate it far better than those who treat its appearance as a sign something is fundamentally wrong.



## The Lifestyle Works Best on a Strong Foundation

One pattern that the lifestyle community is generally honest about: swinging is not a remedy for a troubled relationship. Couples experiencing significant unresolved conflict, broken trust, or major emotional distance tend to find that the transparency the lifestyle demands surfaces those issues quickly and sharply. That's not the lifestyle causing damage — it's the lifestyle accelerating the visibility of something that was already present.

Research summarized by the Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy on couples considering CNM consistently points toward the same conclusion: the lifestyle enriches strong partnerships and challenges struggling ones. Addressing existing difficulties directly — through honest conversation or professional support — before exploring the lifestyle is not a detour; it's the prerequisite.

## What Swing.com Offers

For couples who are curious about the lifestyle and already in a solid place together, Swing.com's verified-profile system gives both partners a shared way to explore. A joint profile means both people see the same connections, make decisions together, and move at a pace that suits them both. Swap-preference filters let couples narrow to soft-swap, full-swap, or whatever dynamic is currently right for them. The event calendar surfaces lifestyle socials and meetups near them — an ideal low-pressure entry point for couples at the beginning of the conversation.

The community at Swing.com includes couples across configurations and orientations — LGBTQ+ partners, mixed-orientation couples, solo members, and people at every stage of lifestyle experience. Whatever stage a couple is at, there's likely a corner of the platform that fits where they are now.
