Having standards in dating is not just reasonable, it’s necessary. But there’s a fine line between knowing your worth and building a checklist so detailed that no real person could ever meet it.
Standards Protect You, But Rigidity Limits You.
Healthy standards are rooted in values, such as how someone treats you, whether they communicate well, and whether your life goals align. Rigid checklists, on the other hand, are often rooted in fear or an idealized image of a partner that doesn’t exist in practice.
Someone can be the wrong height, wrong job, wrong age bracket, and still be exactly the right person. The research backs this up.
A 2019 study from the University of California found that nearly 45% of people ended up in satisfying long-term relationships with partners who didn’t match their stated “type” at the start.
The Difference Between A Standard And A Preference Is Important.
Standards and preferences get confused constantly, but knowing the difference matters.
|
Standards |
Preferences |
|
|---|---|---|
|
What it is |
Non-negotiable values |
Nice-to-haves |
|
Examples |
Emotional maturity, honesty, shared life goals |
Height, job title, specific hobbies |
|
If unmet |
Relationship struggles |
Minor incompatibility |
Standards are things that affect the health of a relationship. Preferences are things that affect your initial attraction. Both are valid, but they shouldn’t carry the same weight.
Overly Rigid Standards Are Sometimes A Defense Mechanism.
This is worth being direct about. Sometimes an impossibly long list of requirements isn’t really about finding the right person. It’s about avoiding the vulnerability that comes with actually trying.
A 2023 report by the American Psychological Association noted that dating avoidance behaviors, including over-filtering potential partners, increased by 32% among U.S. adults between 2019 and 2022.
Apps make this worse. When you can swipe through 50 profiles in five minutes, it trains your brain to treat people like options in a catalog. The result is a paradox: more access to potential partners, but less willingness to give any of them a real chance.
Knowing Your Non-Negotiables Helps You Stay Grounded.
Rather than a long list of requirements, try narrowing it down to three to five genuine non-negotiables: things you know from experience, not assumption, that you cannot work around.
A few examples of what real non-negotiables might look like are:
- You want children and need a partner who does too
- You require emotional availability, not just romantic interest
- Shared values around honesty and communication
- Compatibility around lifestyle, religion, finances, and where you want to live
These are grounded in real relationship outcomes. They’re different from “must be over six feet” or “must have a graduate degree.”
Staying Open Doesn’t Mean Lowering Your Standards.
This is the part people misread. Flexibility is not the same as settling. Being open to someone who doesn’t fit your mental image is not giving up on what you deserve.
According to a 2022 Pew Research study, 53% of U.S. adults who described themselves as “very satisfied” in their relationships said their partner was different from what they originally pictured as their ideal match.
Being open means giving people a fair chance to show you who they are before you decide they’re not enough.
Good Standards Evolve As You Grow.
The things you needed at 24 are not necessarily what you need at 34. Healthy standards are living things. They shift as your self-awareness grows and your life circumstances change.
The goal isn’t a perfect partner, it’s a compatible one. And that starts with being honest about what you actually need versus what you’ve simply convinced yourself you want.
