---
title: "The Commitment Paradox: Is Marriage A Luxury For High Earners?"
description: Eighty-one percent of Gen Z fantasize about monogamous relationships, according to Kinsey Institute research. Yet acceptance rates decline 27% from the first...
author: Darie Nani (Editor-in-Chief)
date: 2026-02-10T13:29:14.000Z
updated: 2026-07-10T13:05:03.734Z
canonical: https://richdadmagazine.com/article/the-commitment-paradox-is-marriage-a-luxury-for-high-earners
image: https://cdn.nanimediahouse.com/byyv4fz4uik.jpg
categories: Family & Relationships
content_type: Analysis
region: Global
publication: Rich Dad Magazine
---

Eighty-one percent of Gen Z respondents report fantasizing about monogamous relationships, with 44% doing so often—nearly twice the rate of older generations, according to [Dr. Justin Lehmiller's 2024 Kinsey Institute research](https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1056664) analyzing 4,175 Americans across four generations. This preference represents higher idealism about traditional commitment than millennials expressed at the same age.

Yet[2020 research by Tila Pronk and Jaap Denissen](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1948550619866189)at Tilburg University, published in Social Psychological and Personality Science, documents what happens when these same individuals enter dating environments: acceptance rates decline 27% on average from the first potential partner viewed to the last. The phenomenon occurs immediately—participants began rejecting more partners from the start of online dating sessions, not after prolonged exposure.

The gap between stated desire (monogamy, "the one," lasting commitment) and demonstrated behavior (rejection acceleration, relationship delay, marriage avoidance) defines the commitment paradox facing younger generations. The explanation isn't attitudinal. It's structural. Economic data, psychological research, and demographic trends converge on mechanisms that override intention: choice architecture that triggers rejection patterns, financial barriers that delay milestones by over a decade, and attachment dynamics shaped by pandemic isolation and digital communication norms.

The evidence shows what produces this gap—and why stated preferences predict commitment less than platform design, debt load, and housing affordability.

## **The Rejection Mind-Set**

Pronk and Denissen's 2020 studies examined 150 participants across three experiments, presenting them with sequential partner profiles in controlled settings. The 27% decline in acceptance manifested across hypothetical profiles, actual dating app interactions, and speed-dating scenarios. Female participants showed additional effects: declining likelihood of achieving romantic matches as profile exposure continued.

The mechanism: "continued access to virtually unlimited potential partners makes people more pessimistic and rejecting," according to the researchers. Satisfaction with photos declined. Perceived dating success dropped. Rather than feeling empowered by options, participants "gradually close off from mating opportunities when online dating."

This contradicts rational choice theory, which predicts more options improve outcomes. Barry Schwartz's paradox of choice framework explains the reversal: abundant options create decision paralysis, heightened expectations, and the persistent belief that better choices remain just ahead. In dating contexts specifically, each profile becomes both opportunity and reminder that alternatives exist.

A 2025 study published in Media Psychology by researchers at multiple European universities examined decision-making across dating app sessions. With increasing profile numbers, users spent more time searching but initiated fewer actual interactions. The [research](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0022103122000531) shows that perceptions of available romantic partners reduce commitment readiness. More visible options decrease willingness to commit to any single option. There are additional effects: profile abundance decreases choice satisfaction, increases fear of being single, and paradoxically lowers self-esteem. Rather than confidence from options, users experience overwhelm from evaluation demands.

The 10 million active daily Tinder users average 140 partner presentations per day, according to 2018 company data cited in the Pronk and Denissen research. The rejection mind-set suggests this volume actively works against the formation of committed relationships—not because users lack desire for partnership, but because the platform architecture triggers psychological responses incompatible with commitment.

## Is Marriage A Luxury For High Earners?

A 2025 Brookings Institution report documents marriage rate divergence: the top 20% of earners maintain significantly higher marriage rates than lower-income groups. Dr. Lisa Arnold, economist, explains: "For affluent couples, marriage is less about financial survival and more about solidifying a partnership that enhances their already stable economic standing."

Meanwhile, 73% of Gen Z and millennial couples consider marriage too costly in the current economy, according to a 2023 Thriving Center of Psychology survey. More than half of unmarried millennials in a Credit Karma survey said they don't want to marry until their finances are in order.

These aren't preference shifts—they're constraint responses. Only 27% of millennials were married as of 2014, compared to 36% of Generation X and 48% of baby boomers at the same age, according to Gallup data cited by relationship psychologists: "For the first time in history, people are experiencing marriage as an option instead of a necessity."

The economics create a specific dynamic: by the time financial preconditions for partnership arrive (career stability, [debt reduction](https://richdadmagazine.com/article/why-finance-professionals-are-trading-corporate-careers-for-writing-3d12cc), housing affordability), individuals have spent a decade or more navigating [dating environments ](https://richdadmagazine.com/article/navigating-modern-relationships-a-man-s-guide-to-love-5824fb)structurally designed to prevent commitment formation. The rejection mind-set develops during years of dating app use. Dismissive attachment patterns solidify through prolonged situationships. By the time partnership becomes economically feasible, the psychological mechanisms preventing commitment have become entrenched.
