- Higher relationship satisfaction
- Stronger sexual connection
- Lower divorce risk
- Better communication
- Self-expansion and reduced boredom
How to start.
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01
Block it on the calendar
Pick a consistent night (every Thursday, every other Saturday, whatever fits). Put it on a shared calendar. Treat it like a work meeting you would not cancel.
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02
Alternate who plans
Take turns choosing what you do. This keeps things fresh and prevents one person from carrying the mental load of planning every time.
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03
Put the phones away
No scrolling at the table. If you need to, leave phones in the car or turn on Do Not Disturb. The whole point is undivided attention.
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04
Try something new at least once a month
Routine is comfortable, but novelty is what deepens connection. Swap the usual restaurant for a pottery class, a night hike, or a recipe you have never attempted.
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05
Keep it low-pressure
Date night does not have to be expensive or elaborate. A walk and an ice cream counts. Candles and a home-cooked meal counts. The only requirement is focused time together.
Why it works.
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Higher relationship satisfaction
In the 2023 Date Night Opportunity report, 84% of husbands and 83% of wives who had regular date nights reported being very happy in their marriages, compared with 68-70% of those without regular date nights.
Wilcox & Dew, The Date Night Opportunity (National Marriage Project / Wheatley Institute, 2023)
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Stronger sexual connection
The same report found that 68% of wives and 67% of husbands with regular date nights were very satisfied with their sexual relationship, versus 47% of those without. That is a 20-point gap from one scheduled evening.
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Lower divorce risk
Analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study (9,969 couples) found that married couples who went on monthly date nights had 14% lower odds of splitting up over a decade, even after controlling for income, education, and relationship quality at baseline.
Benson, Marriage Foundation (2016), Millennium Cohort Study analysis
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Better communication
The Date Night Opportunity data showed that 77% of husbands and 71% of wives with regular date nights were very happy with how they communicate, compared to 59% and 51% respectively in the no-date-night group.
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Self-expansion and reduced boredom
Couples who do novel, mildly challenging activities together (cooking a new cuisine, hiking a new trail) report higher closeness and satisfaction both that day and three months later, according to research on self-expansion theory by Aron and colleagues.
Harasymchuk et al., Journal of Social and Personal Relationships (2021)
Who swears by it.
Barack and Michelle Obama
During their White House years and after, the Obamas treated regular evenings together as non-negotiable. Michelle has described deliberately not speaking all day so they have things to talk about at dinner.
Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan
Early in their relationship, Chan insisted on a minimum of 100 minutes of alone time per week plus a weekly date night. No work talk allowed.
John Gottman
The researcher behind the "Love Lab" at the University of Washington recommends weekly couple time as a cornerstone habit. His book Eight Dates structures relationship conversations around eight themed evenings.
Brad Wilcox
Sociologist and lead author of the Date Night Opportunity report. His data across thousands of American couples helped quantify the link between regular date nights and marital stability.
John's take.
I used to think date night was something couples did when they were running out of things to say. Turns out it is the opposite. It is how you keep having things to say.
The rule that made the biggest difference for us: alternate who plans. When only one person picks, date night quietly becomes another chore for them and a passive show-up for the other. Taking turns fixed that immediately.
The other thing I would add: do not save hard conversations for date night. That is your repair-and-enjoy time, not your let-me-bring-up-the-budget time. Keep a separate weekly check-in for logistics if you need one. Date night should feel like you actually like each other, because you do.
Common questions.
How often should you have a date night?
The research from the National Marriage Project found the biggest benefits at once or twice a month. Weekly is better if you can manage it, but even monthly made a measurable difference in relationship satisfaction and divorce risk.
Does date night have to cost money?
No. Some of the best date nights are free: a walk after the kids are asleep, cooking something new together, or stargazing in the backyard. What matters is protected, phone-free, one-on-one time.
What if we have young kids and no babysitter?
After-bedtime date nights at home work well. Light candles, cook something you would not normally make, put the phones in another room. Some couples swap babysitting with friends on alternating weekends. The key is carving out time where you are a couple, not just co-parents.
What should you do on a date night?
Anything that gives you focused time together. Research on self-expansion suggests that novel activities (a class, a new restaurant, a hike you have not done) deepen connection more than repeating the same routine. But even a quiet dinner out counts if the conversation is real.
Is the evidence for date nights strong?
It is mostly correlational. Couples who schedule date nights may already have stronger relationships, so we cannot be sure the date night itself is causing the improvement. That said, the pattern across multiple large studies is consistent enough to be worth acting on.