
According to Dr. Jan Halper, just three percent (3%) of men who had extramarital affairs actually wed their mistresses. Take a moment and let that startling statistic sink in. For every 100 extramarital affairs, only three will ever end in a marriage between the cheaters. The sad news is that the three percent survival rate isn’t even the sad news of extramarital affairs.
Available research suggests fewer than 25 percent (25%) of cheaters leave their marriage for an affair partner. According to one source, most of those relationships are statistically unlikely to endure. Most of those marriages that begin as affairs join the 75 percent of second marriages that fail, a rate half again as high as first marriages.
According to Elizabeth Landers, who writes about marriage and family, a second marriage that begins with infidelity will likely fail within two years. Of course, there are no guarantees second marriages that begin as affairs will fail. However, the available research and data strongly support such outcomes. Other research suggests most marriages that begin as affairs don’t survive past five years.
That said, the probability of affairs even ending in marriage is extremely low. The research and estimates available suggest it is somewhere between three and five percent. Some research suggests it may be as high as five to seven percent. Regardless, the likelihood of affairs successfully ending in marriage is statistically low.
Dr. Frank Pittman, the noted psychiatrist, and author, and many others have conjectured about why almost all affairs falter and fail to produce lasting and healthy marriages or romantic relationships. Many of those reasons also follow those rare cases when an affair ends in marriage and causes their demise.
While there are many studies and articles on the reasons for marriages that begin as affairs being destined to end in divorce, this article will not delve into the reasons. Suffice it to say, that marriages resulting from affairs were built on infidelity, deceit, betrayal, and selfishness. Spouses who cheated and married their cheating partner know what their cheating spouse is capable of because they cheated and justified their cheating together.
Cheating Marriages
By definition, cheating is acting dishonestly or unfairly to gain an advantage. Marital or romantic relationship cheating is the breaking of a promise made to a spouse or partner by having an intimate relationship or sex with someone else. Cheating and infidelity are similar. Infidelity is the act or fact of having a romantic or sexual relationship with someone other than one’s husband, wife, or partner — unfaithfulness to a moral obligation. It is disloyalty and dishonor. Cheating is the ultimate romantic relationship violation of trust, fidelity, honor, and integrity.
For cheaters who left their marriage and married their affair partner, issues of trust will most likely become serious and constant considerations during their marriage. Most spouses who left their marriages for their affair partners have made life-changing sacrifices — both personally and regarding their families. Their sacrifice includes enduring public and personal shame, resentment, and uncertainty. Most of these sacrifices are unwittingly self-inflicted.
Issues of lost trust and integrity are a common theme with married former affair partners. The resulting distrust is a natural byproduct of relationships borne out of lies, deceit, betrayal, and infidelity. Furthermore, recent research also suggests that those who have cheated in marriage or romantic relationships previously are three times more likely to cheat again.
Cheaters are Three Times (3x) More Likely to Cheat Again
In a study from the University of Denver, published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior, researchers had nearly 500 people answer questions about at least two different romantic relationships. Of the research participants, 44 percent reported having sex with someone outside of their current relationship during their study.
People who had cheated before were much more prone to unfaithfulness. Those who cheated in their first relationship were three times (3x) more likely to cheat again.
Interestingly enough, the study finding is also backed up by past research. A 2016 study found that among people who had cheated in former relationships, 30 percent cheated on their current partners. That’s compared to only 13 percent of those who had never been unfaithful at all.
Key Takeaways
Most cheaters feel guilty about cheating on their spouses. In addition, they feel like they aren’t true to their own set of morals, even if their partner never finds out. They may feel like they can’t stop themselves, but they’re still tortured by what they’re doing. For many, conscience can serve as an important brake on infidelity and a lesson for learning from infidelity. (By contrast, cheaters with more sociopathic traits won’t feel much guilt for their actions which means they are more likely to take advantage of the next opportunity that presents itself.)
For marriages that begin as affairs, both spouses already know that each is capable of infidelity, deceit, lies, and betrayal. Is it surprising that most affairs do not end in marriage and those rare ones that do end in marriage don’t end well? Cheaters who bet their life and happiness on being in the three percent group, when factoring in the 75% divorce rate for second marriages, are essentially in the one percent (1%) survival group from “affair to second marriage” success. On the other hand, affairs are much more effective at ruining marriages and families than in creating new ones.
Recovering From Infidelity
If you have experienced infidelity-induced trauma caused by the emotional and sexual betrayal of your spouse, there is hope! If you are a child affected by parental infidelity, there is hope! There is hope if you are a spouse who has betrayed your marriage’s trust, love, and fidelity! We recommend that you seek support through professional counseling and therapy and groups dedicated to supporting you through this traumatic journey. You are not alone and recovery and healing are possible!
Share Your Story
The CHADIE Foundation shares personal stories of spouses and children impacted by infidelity and affairs. If you have a story you want to share and have published, please use the contact information below to share your story with The CHADIE Foundation. Our mission is to help educate everyone about the damage infidelity, affairs, and adultery cause families and how to minimize the impact.
About CHADIE Foundation
The CHADIE Foundation (Children are Harmed by Adultery, Divorce, Infidelity, and related Emotional trauma), helps spouses, partners, and children who adultery, affairs, and infidelity have negatively impacted. To learn more about CHADIE and how you can help, please email us at support@chadie.org or visit us at CHADIE.org.