Young adults’ relationship happiness in England during COVID-19
Young adults’ relationship happiness in England during COVID-19
Given the relevance of romantic relationships for physical and mental health, it is important to be attentive to how younger adults may have experienced COVID-19 and to explicitly differentiate between being in a romantic relationship and living arrangements (i.e. co-residing or not with the partner). Yet most research during the pandemic has focused on older adults, families, or cohabiting partners. This work investigates relationship happiness among 30-year-olds living with or apart from their partner during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in England. Using Next Steps, a nationally representative longitudinal study in England, we investigate the role of living arrangements on relationship happiness in 2020–2021 among 2338 30/31-year-olds. Levels of relationship happiness were lowest among those not living together throughout the pandemic, whereas there was no difference between those who were already living together before COVID-19 and those who moved in together during this period. The findings illustrate the importance of not conflating romantic relationships with co-residence to understand levels of relationship happiness among young adults and the role of romantic relationships for physical and mental health. Research and policy should attend to how younger adults were differentially affected by the pandemic lockdown measures.
Sironi, Maria
5784f670-4ab3-4f7a-a710-53c3884382f4
Chanfreau, Jenny
a626e6f7-e60a-49a8-941f-c1ad16be7a15
Palma, Maria
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Zilanawala, Afshin
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22 September 2025
Sironi, Maria
5784f670-4ab3-4f7a-a710-53c3884382f4
Chanfreau, Jenny
a626e6f7-e60a-49a8-941f-c1ad16be7a15
Palma, Maria
752fc097-2574-45e9-9a1a-8c2d474bdae7
Zilanawala, Afshin
dddbeee8-798a-441c-bb79-f0d3908647dd
Sironi, Maria, Chanfreau, Jenny, Palma, Maria and Zilanawala, Afshin
(2025)
Young adults’ relationship happiness in England during COVID-19.
Journal of Happiness Studies, 26, [126].
(doi:10.1007/s10902-025-00928-x).
Abstract
Given the relevance of romantic relationships for physical and mental health, it is important to be attentive to how younger adults may have experienced COVID-19 and to explicitly differentiate between being in a romantic relationship and living arrangements (i.e. co-residing or not with the partner). Yet most research during the pandemic has focused on older adults, families, or cohabiting partners. This work investigates relationship happiness among 30-year-olds living with or apart from their partner during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in England. Using Next Steps, a nationally representative longitudinal study in England, we investigate the role of living arrangements on relationship happiness in 2020–2021 among 2338 30/31-year-olds. Levels of relationship happiness were lowest among those not living together throughout the pandemic, whereas there was no difference between those who were already living together before COVID-19 and those who moved in together during this period. The findings illustrate the importance of not conflating romantic relationships with co-residence to understand levels of relationship happiness among young adults and the role of romantic relationships for physical and mental health. Research and policy should attend to how younger adults were differentially affected by the pandemic lockdown measures.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 June 2025
Published date: 22 September 2025
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Local EPrints ID: 503761
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503761
ISSN: 1389-4978
PURE UUID: 3e7e990d-bba3-4fa4-a4f2-3f0fc890cd94
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Date deposited: 12 Aug 2025 17:09
Last modified: 27 Sep 2025 02:07
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Author:
Maria Sironi
Author:
Jenny Chanfreau
Author:
Maria Palma
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