‘Those never work’ is the standard response when someone mentions a long-distance relationship. The data tells a more nuanced story.
Research published in the Journal of Communication found that long-distance couples often report equal or higher levels of relationship satisfaction compared to geographically close couples. An estimated 14 to 15 million couples in the United States are currently in a long-distance relationship. The success rate, based on meta-analyses of LDR studies, sits at roughly 58 to 60%.
The couples who make it are not the ones who avoid difficulty. They are the ones who use the distance as a reason to be more deliberate about communication, trust, and intentionality than most geographically close couples ever have to be.
What the Research Says About Success
Three factors consistently predict whether a long-distance relationship succeeds or fails:
- A shared end goal: both partners believe the distance is temporary and are actively working toward being in the same place. Couples with a clear plan for closing the distance have a 71% success rate; those without one have a 37% success rate.
- Communication quality over quantity: research consistently shows that relationship satisfaction in LDRs correlates more with communication quality than frequency. A 20-minute conversation where both partners are fully present beats two hours of distracted, multitasking chat.
- Individual fullness: partners who maintain their own friendships, interests, and daily life outside the relationship sustain higher satisfaction than those who put the relationship at the center of everything and wait for the next call.
One counterintuitive finding: 37% of LDR couples break up within 3 months of closing the distance. The transition from long-distance to sharing space brings its own challenges, often overlooked in the focus on surviving the separation.
Communication: Quality Beats Frequency
The instinct in long-distance relationships is to stay in constant contact, to fill the absence with texts and calls. Research suggests this can backfire.
Excessive contact creates pressure and dependency rather than connection. It leaves nothing to share when you do talk. And it can prevent both people from living fully in their actual lives.
What works better: scheduled, protected communication time that both partners prioritize. Video calls where you are actually present and not multitasking. Asynchronous communication (voice notes, longer texts) that fits around real schedules rather than demanding instant availability.
Predictability matters more than volume. Knowing your partner will call on Thursday evening at 8pm is more reassuring than constant sporadic texts with no structure.
Managing Jealousy and Insecurity
Jealousy in long-distance relationships often comes from not knowing the context of your partner’s daily life. The people they mention, the places they spend time, the routines you are not part of.
The evidence-based approach: make your partner’s life more concrete through detail. Introduce your friends by name and character. Describe your physical environment. Share the texture of your days, not just the highlights. A partner who feels familiar with your life has far less room for anxious imagination to fill.
Location sharing through phones can seem reassuring but tends to feed anxiety rather than resolve it. Research on digital intimacy suggests that constant location monitoring increases rather than decreases jealousy over time.
Maintaining Intimacy Across Distance
Intimacy in long-distance relationships requires more deliberate effort because the passive intimacy of shared physical space does not exist. You have to create it intentionally.
| What Works | How to Do It |
| Watching something together | Synchronized streaming (Netflix Party, Teleparty) or simply pressing play at the same time on the phone |
| Shared rituals | Morning coffee text, goodnight voice note, weekly video dinner |
| Letters and physical mail | A handwritten letter takes 10 minutes and has outsized impact; it is tangible in a relationship defined by digital distance |
| Planning the reunion | Having a specific date circled creates anticipation and momentum; it makes the distance concrete and finite |
The Transition: When You Close the Distance
One of the most poorly-prepared-for phases of a long-distance relationship is the first months after closing the distance. The research finding that 37% of LDR couples break up within 3 months of reuniting is consistent across studies.
Why: long-distance relationships have idealized dynamics. You see each other at your best for finite, concentrated periods. The daily reality of sharing space, different habits, different needs for alone time, and the disappearance of the structured longing that defined the relationship can be disorienting.
Prepare for it: talk about practical logistics before the move. Agree on how much alone time you each need. Expect an adjustment period of 3 to 6 months. Consider a few sessions of couples therapy during the transition, which research on LDR success consistently identifies as helpful during this phase.
FAQ
Do long-distance relationships actually work?
Yes. Research suggests a 58 to 60% success rate, comparable to geographically close relationships. Couples with a clear end date for the distance have a 71% success rate. The quality of communication and commitment to shared goals predict success more than the distance itself.
How often should we communicate in a long-distance relationship?
Quality matters more than frequency. Research shows relationship satisfaction correlates more with how meaningful the communication is than how often it happens. Scheduled, protected time is more valuable than constant availability. Find what works for both of your actual schedules and lives.
What is the biggest predictor of LDR success?
Having a concrete plan for closing the distance. Couples with an agreed end goal have significantly higher success rates (71%) than those without one (37%). The plan does not need a fixed date immediately, but both partners need to be actively working toward the same outcome.
Distance can test a relationship, but trust, communication, and shared goals help it thrive. WritoryBuzz creates thoughtful relationship and lifestyle content that helps readers build stronger, healthier connections.