Why Are Youths Not Dating
1. Dating, a high barrier to entry
To many youths, dating is no longer a light or exploratory experience. When asked about factors deterring them from dating, many youths cited dating as a high-commitment decision—emotionally demanding, time-consuming, and, for some, financially burdensome.
“Dating is time-consuming, a lot of commitment is required.”
“I would choose to actively abstain from relationships in a future, as freedom for me is important.”
Rather than a space to learn about themselves or others, dating has become a focused pathway toward marriage, one that requires seriousness and clear intention from the start.
Because of this, many youths assume that any early flaw or imperfect level of commitment signals an inevitable breakup. When breakups are framed as failure, dating starts to feel risky—something to enter only when conditions are ideal. As a result, dating is seen as a high-stakes test of lifelong compatibility and a direct route to marriage.
2. Unhealthy modelling of love
Before many youths ever experience their first relationship, they have already learned what love looks like—through conflict at home, divorce, heartbreak, and broken relationships around them. Through these lived and observed experiences, relationships become associated with instability, emotional turmoil, and pain.
“I do not want to repeat the same mistakes my parents made.”
“Growing up, my relationship with my parents has given me the idea that marriage is a burden and is painful.”
When love is modelled as something that hurts, fear naturally follows. For many youths, that fear triggers a protective response: emotional walls being built, and independence is chosen instead—because it feels safer, more predictable, and more within their control.
3. Idealised expectations of love
Many youths are not opposed to love or relationships. Instead, they speak about waiting for the “right time,” often with the mindset, “If it comes, it comes.” Beneath this patience, however, lies an idealised understanding of love.
“I’m not in a rush to start dating for practical reasons like building up work and finances and even my spiritual [being] and everything.”
“Being ready means someone who worked on themselves for a long time and reached a certain level of being confident they have something to offer to someone else. Also, being developed in different aspects of life in mental, emotional, spiritual, financial stability. Attract somebody of similar development as me.”
Love is increasingly expected to arrive already stable—emotionally, financially, and in the same life stage. Conflict or misalignment is often read as incompatibility rather than part of growth. Influenced by idealised narratives of “the one,” youths hold high expectations not only of their partners but also of themselves, leaving little room for love to develop through uncertainty. In this context, waiting feels safer than trying, because trying risks discovering that neither the relationship nor the people in it are fully formed yet.
But no one enters relationships at perfection. Love is not meant to begin after growth—it is where growth, understanding, and resilience are formed alongside another person.
What’s the issue?
If youths are taking love seriously, then the issue is not a lack of intention—it is postponement. Dating is delayed not because youths do not desire connection, but because they fear vulnerability and the possibility of failure. When breakups are framed as personal failure, emotional safety begins to feel wiser than emotional risk.
As seriousness replaces curiosity, dating loses its role as a space for learning. Relationships are not something we earn after a period of intentional personal growth; they are one of the main conduits that growth happens. Yet many youths believe love should only begin once they are fully “ready”—after stability, clarity, and healing. In a failure-averse culture, this expectation turns uncertainty into something to avoid rather than navigate.
The result is a paradox: love is deeply valued, yet endlessly deferred. But no one enters relationships at perfection. Love is not meant to begin after growth—it is where growth, understanding, and resilience are formed alongside another person. This leads to the real question: how can youths remain open to love without lowering their standards or exposing themselves to unnecessary emotional harm?