Modern cultural commentary about marriage has tilted heavily toward the institution’s downsidesโdivorce rates, opportunity costs, the financial math of weddings, the rising number of people choosing to skip it. Some of that skepticism is fair. But across decades of social science research, married people, on average, do measurably better than their unmarried peers on outcomes that matter: net worth, longevity, mental health, recovery from illness, and several economic measures that compound over time. The effect is robust enough that it survives controls for selection bias, income, education, and starting wealthโand the cultural conversation almost never includes it.
This isn’t an argument that marriage is right for everyone. It’s an argument that pretending the effect doesn’t exist is its own kind of dishonesty.
The economic data is consistent
Married couples accumulate wealth faster than singles or cohabiters, and the gap widens over time. Federal Reserve and Census data consistently show that married households have median net worth several times higher than the median for unmarried adults, even after adjusting for the obvious fact that two earners can outsave one. Some of this is structural: marriage allows for tax filing efficiencies in many cases, joint mortgages with stronger underwriting profiles, shared insurance and benefits, and economies of scale on housing and food. Some is behavioral: married couples report higher savings rates and longer planning horizons. And some is institutionalโthe legal scaffolding around marriage handles property, inheritance, and medical decisions in ways that durable cohabitation, however committed, has to reconstruct piece by piece.
Health and longevity follow the same pattern
The longevity effect is well-documented and strikingly large. Married adults live measurably longer than their never-married, divorced, or widowed peers, controlling for age, income, and baseline health. The effect is larger for men than women but present in both. Hospitalization recovery is faster, post-surgical outcomes are better, and adherence to medication regimens is higher. The mechanisms are unsurprising once enumerated: a partner notices symptoms, drives to appointments, enforces follow-up, provides emotional buffering against stress. Loneliness research, which has surged in the past decade, finds chronic isolation comparable in mortality impact to smoking. Marriage isn’t the only relationship that addresses this, but it’s the most reliable structural commitment to the daily presence of another person, and the data reflect that.
Why the conversation doesn’t include it
Several factors keep the marriage bonus out of mainstream discourse. The selection-bias critiqueโthat healthier, wealthier, more conscientious people are more likely to marry, so marriage doesn’t cause the outcomesโhas merit but has been seriously addressed by researchers, who consistently find a residual effect after controls. Cultural caution about appearing to lecture single people, who include large numbers of people who would prefer to be married and aren’t by choice, makes the topic awkward. And marriage advocacy in the U.S. has been politically loaded for so long that even neutral findings get treated as partisan. None of which makes the effect smaller.
The takeaway
Marriage isn’t a moral imperative, and the bonus doesn’t apply uniformly to bad marriages. But the average effect is real, durable, and largely missing from the cultural conversation. That absence is itself worth noticing.
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