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Psychologysts say that this common habit could be destroying your relationship

Habit, relationship, couples

A couple upset on a couch.

Most couples fall into habits that feel normal and even healthy, but there’s one behavior experts warn can quietly poison relationships from the inside out. It feels harmless and usually goes unnoticed until resentment builds and communication breaks down.

That habit is keeping score. Therapists say it’s one of the fastest ways to erode trust and intimacy between partners. In the following sections, we’ll look at what keeping score means in a couple, why it’s damaging, and what you can do instead to build a stronger connection.

Keeping score and why this habit hurts relationships

Keeping score in a relationship happens when one or both partners track who’s doing more, who’s giving less, and who owes what. It might sound like, “I did the dishes three times this week, and you only did them once”, or “I always plan our vacations, and you never help”. While it may feel like a way to make things “fair”, it actually breeds resentment.

The problem is that scorekeeping rarely focuses on love, kindness, or generosity. It magnifies negatives while ignoring positives. Instead of noticing the small thoughtful gestures—like a partner picking up groceries or offering support after a long day—the attention goes to what hasn’t been done. This constant tallying shifts the relationship into a competition rather than a partnership.

Psychologists explain that keeping score is often rooted in family patterns. People raised in households where parents kept track of every chore or favor may unconsciously repeat the same dynamic. It can also become a passive way of expressing anger or trying to “teach a lesson”, but instead of resolving conflict, it creates a cycle of blame and defensiveness.

Research in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology suggests that these behaviors function like the silent treatment: they may feel like control, but they erode emotional safety and trust. Over time, couples locked in this dynamic report feeling less connected, more hostile, and more likely to have explosive arguments.

Healthier ways to connect without keeping score

Once you recognize the pattern, it’s possible to replace it with habits that encourage gratitude, communication, and teamwork. Here are a few ways couples can start:

The healthiest relationships aren’t measured in points. Some days one partner will give more, other days the balance will shift. What matters is the sense of teamwork, trust, and care that grows with appreciation and open communication. By letting go of tallies, couples create space for more love, less resentment, and a stronger bond.

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