Among adults 25 and older with a four-year college degree, 65% were married in 2015. For those with no schooling past high school, the figure was 50%. That 15-point gap, reported by Pew Research Center, is one sign that education and dating outcomes move together. The connection is real, but its source is mixed, and a degree turns out to be a marker for income, stability, and timing as much as for schooling itself.
The Marriage Gap by Education Level
The link between schooling and partnership is measurable. Pew Research Center found that 55% of adults with some college were married, a rate between degree holders and the high school group. A quarter century earlier, around 1990, the rate was above 60% for all three groups. Marriage declined faster for people without degrees, which widened a gap that had once been narrow.
Marriage rates for college-educated women have held above 70%, while the rate for women without a degree fell from 78.7% to 52.4% across the cohorts researchers tracked. The gap that opened comes from falling partnership rates at the lower end of the schooling distribution, while the top held relatively steady.
This pattern does not mean a degree causes marriage. Education correlates with income, later childbearing, and steadier employment, and each of those factors raise the odds of marriage on their own. The diploma is a marker for a cluster of traits that partners tend to seek in long-term relationships.
Educational Sorting in Couples
People with similar schooling pair off at rates higher than chance would predict. A 2024 study in the journal Demography tracked eight decades of this sorting in the United States. Educational homogamy rose through most of the 20th century, stalled near 1990, and began to reverse in the 2000s. Couples still match by education far more than random pairing would produce, but the long climb has leveled.
The effect concentrates at the top. Among degree-holding couples, the level of matching is double the rate expected from random pairing. Two graduates finding each other is the most common outcome in that group, driven by shared workplaces, social circles, and overlapping professional networks.
The gap widens at higher levels. Women took 62% of master’s degrees by 2021, which deepens the shortage of similarly credentialed men for women who hold advanced degrees.
Preferences Beyond Credentials
Education is one filter people apply, but it is not the only one. Some daters rank shared ambition first, others value a similar pace of life, and others prefer relationships that state expectations clearly from the beginning.
A person who chooses to date a sugar baby may apply a different set of criteria, weighing lifestyle compatibility and clearly stated expectations. The factors that matter to a given person can be far from the credential-matching that large surveys measure.
Survey data on educational sorting captures averages, not individual intent. Plenty of people build successful relationships around traits that no transcript records.
The Numbers Behind the Imbalance
The supply of educated partners is no longer even between the sexes. Women have moved ahead of men in college completion, now earning more than 57% of bachelor’s degrees in the United States, and they outnumber men on four-year campuses by roughly 1.6 million.
Among adults 25 to 34, 47% of women hold a bachelor’s degree against 37% of men. A college-educated woman who wants a partner with the same schooling faces a smaller pool of available men than her own numbers would initially suggest.
The result shows up in who marries whom. College-educated women have kept their marriage rates high, increasingly by marrying less educated men. Where educated women outnumber educated men, women partner down in schooling more often than they stay unpartnered.
The credential match many people say they want has become harder to find than it was for earlier generations.
Preferences in the Dating Market
Stated preferences differ by sex. Research on how much education matters in online dating shows that women, on average, place more weight on a partner’s schooling and earning capacity, while men place more weight on physical appearance.
University-educated women are more likely to pass over men with less schooling than their own. University-educated men more often show openness toward partners with less education.
The pattern also appears in recent marriages. Among newlyweds, more than 25% of women married a partner with less education, against 15% of men who did the same. In 2012, roughly 40% of college-educated women had a husband without a degree, a reversal of the era when men were more likely to marry down educationally.
These tendencies create the mismatch described above. Women aiming for an equal or higher credential are searching within a shrinking group, while men with degrees face a wider field. Preference and supply pull against each other in the modern dating and marriage market, and the strain often falls hardest on highly educated women looking for a partner who matches their own schooling.
Stability After the Match
Education predicts how long a marriage lasts, beyond who marries in the first place. Pew Research Center reported that 78% of college-educated women who married for the first time between 2006 and 2010 could expect their unions to reach 20 years. For women with a high school education or less, the figure was 40%.
The durability gap is wider than the gap in who marries at all. A 2013 Bureau of Labor Statistics analysis found that more than half of marriages among people who did not finish high school ended in divorce, against roughly 30% among college graduates.
Income stability and a later marriage age explain part of that number, along with lower financial stress. A degree does not protect a relationship by itself. It comes with conditions that make a partnership easier to sustain, which is why the statistic holds across large population samples.
Education as a Dating Predictor
A degree changes the odds without deciding the result for any one person. The data shows higher marriage rates, stronger educational sorting, and longer-lasting unions among the college-educated, yet none of it dictates a single relationship.
Education works as a proxy for income, social timing, career stability, and long-term planning, and those forces explain most of the pattern. Anyone weighing a partner’s schooling is reading a useful signal that stops short of a verdict. The transcript narrows the probabilities and leaves the rest to the people involved.
Conclusion
Education clearly influences modern dating patterns, but not in a simple or absolute way. Research consistently shows stronger marriage rates, higher relationship stability, and greater educational matching among college-educated adults, yet personal compatibility still matters far more than a diploma alone. Shared values, emotional connection, financial stability, communication, and long-term goals continue to shape relationship success beyond formal education. A degree may affect opportunities, social circles, and dating preferences, but it does not guarantee either a successful relationship or a failed one. In the end, education works more as a signal within the dating market than a final measure of compatibility.
