Cohabitation Trends
From the Demographic and Behavioral Sciences Branch, Center for Population Research,
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), National
Institutes of Health
Cohabitation has continued to increase
dramatically in recent years as younger
women have moved into the prime marriage
and child-bearing years.
Half of women in their 30s in 1995 had
lived with an intimate sexual partner outside
of marriage. The share of women ages 20 to
24 who had ever lived in a cohabiting relationship
increased by one third between
1988 and 1995. The increase was even more
dramatic for women in their late 30s; the
share who had ever cohabited grew about 60
percent during this same time period.
Cohabitation, once rare, is now the norm:
The researchers found that more than half
(54 percent) of all first marriages between
1990 and 1994 began with unmarried cohabitation.
They estimate that a majority
of young men and women of marriageable
age today will spend some time in a cohabiting
relationship.
Cohabitation is most widespread among
couples with lower levels of education. The
sharpest increase in cohabitation between
1988 and 1995 occurred among high
school graduates (44 percent), the smallest
among college graduates (19 percent). Although
cohabitation increased among both
whites and African Americans, the increase
was much greater among whites; by 1995,
there was no racial difference in the proportion
of women who had ever cohabited.
Cohabiting relationships are less stable
than marriages and that instability is increasing,
the study found. The share of cohabiting
partners who eventually married
each other declined from 60 percent to 53
percent between 1988 and 1995. The proportion
of cohabiting couples whose relationships
ended within 5 years increased
from 45 percent to 54 percent, whether or
not the partners ever married. The researchers
suggest that the lower marriage
and higher breakup rates reflect the fact that living together has become more
widespread and is now practiced by couples
with a less serious commitment to a longterm
relationship.
September 2002