If I knew then: 5 reasons you may regret marrying your spouse
LET’S have a honest conversation. You enjoyed the big celebration, the beautiful wedding dress, and the fairytale wedding. Six months in, you start to question whether you married the right person.
Sounds strange? No, it’s not. More couples than we care to admit have been in that situation, questioning themselves about whether they made the right choice.
A comprehensive legacy poll by The Today Show found that 57 per cent of married women admitted to occasionally regretting marrying their husband, and 72 per cent had considered leaving at some point in the relationship.
Marriage is one of the most beautiful decisions a woman can make, but it can also become one of the most painful when entered into without knowing exactly why you married that person.
Regret in marriage does not always come from dramatic betrayal or obvious dysfunction. Sometimes, it grows quietly, through misalignment, unspoken expectations, and realities that reveal themselves over time.
Many women do not regret marriage itself. They regret who they married and more importantly, why they married them. Let’s unpack this with honesty because many couples are reading about themselves in this article.
You married potential instead of reality
This is one of the most common traps. You saw who he could become. His dreams. His intentions. His “good heart”. But you ignored who he consistently was.
A man can be ambitious but never do what he needs to do to achieve his dreams. Marriage does not transform potential into performance. It will show up patterns because now that you are around that person every day, you will notice things you didn’t before.
If he was inconsistent before, he will likely be inconsistent after you marry him. If he lacked discipline before, marriage will not suddenly produce it. You can have hope, but hope will not change a person or produce results. Consistent actions and discipline do.
You ignored red flags because you wanted it to work
You’re not the only woman who saw warning signs and still married him. Many women do the same thing. The temper. The disrespect. The emotional distance. The lack of accountability.
But instead of addressing it, we rationalise it. When your girlfriends or family pointed it out you said…
“We all have flaws.”
“He’ll grow out of it.”
“It’s not that bad.”
But red flags do not disappear when you get married. In fact, they often become more pronounced under pressure.
Here’s the truth, what you ignore during dating, you will manage in marriage.
You were more in love with the idea of marriage than the person
Society celebrates weddings, milestones, timelines. There is real pressure on single women to get married, spoken and unspoken pressure to “settle down”, to “not be left behind”, to “make it happen”.
But here is the truth many women quietly learn later – a wedding is a day. Marriage is a lifetime.
If the decision is driven by loneliness, pressure, or comparison, you may wake up one day feeling deeply unfulfilled, not because marriage failed, but because the foundation was never solid.
Marriage should be about compatibility, love and commitment based on ‘knowing’ a person is right for you. Don’t get married because society thinks it’s the right thing to do because ‘time is running out’.
You did not truly know yourself before choosing him
There is a deeper truth in all of this though. Some women marry before they are emotionally, mentally and financially ready.
When a woman has not fully discovered her identity, healed her wounds, or understood her needs, she may choose a partner from a place of confusion rather than a clear understanding of why she’s marrying him.
But here’s the thing ladies, you cannot make a wise life-long decision from an unclear sense of self. At 18 years old, someone proposed to me and I ran! I ran like the runaway bride because I knew I had not experienced life, not travelled, not met that many people yet.
Many regrets stem from the realisation that “I chose him before I truly knew me”.
Growth changes perspective and sometimes when you begin to regret marrying someone, it’s because the person you chose no longer aligns with the woman you’ve become.
You confused love with compatibility
Love is powerful, but in practicality, it is not enough to sustain a marriage.
You can love someone deeply and still be fundamentally mismatched in values, communication styles, emotional maturity, or life direction.
So compatibility is necessary because it shows up in how you resolve conflict, how you handle pressure, how you communicate and how you grow together.
Love without compatibility and shared vision often leads to frustration, because affection cannot fix misalignment. You can love him and still not like his attitude, his approach to things, or his outlook on life.
If this article is speaking to you, listen, you are among many who are in this situation. Marriage regret is more common than you know and it’s not always loud. One frequently cited survey of 1,800 people found that 72 per cent of men and 54 per cent of women reported having regrets about tying the knot with their partner, often peaking around the third year of marriage.
Sometimes the regret is quietly felt in emotional distance, unmet needs, or a sense that something is missing.
But this conversation is not about condemnation, it is about awareness.
For those considering marriage, take your time. Ask deeper questions. Observe patterns. Know yourself. Know your partner.
For those already married, reflection is not failure. It is an opportunity for growth, communication, and, where possible, restoration.
You might not be able to change the past, but you can become wiser, stronger and more intentional moving forward.
Marie Berbick-Bailey is a certified master life coach, women’s transformational coach, ordained minister, author, motivational speaker, wife, mother and big sister dedicated to empowering women to heal, thrive, and walk in purpose. Connect with her at www.marieberbick.com, www.marieberbickcoach.com, or e-mail marieberbick@gmail.com.