Couples Emotional Health: 15 Questions to Assess Your Bond
TL;DR: A couple's emotional health does not depend on the absence of conflict, but on how conflict is handled. According to psychologist Gottman, certain behaviors can predict a breakup with 93% accuracy. A healthy relationship rests on five pillars: emotional safety that allows you to express your needs without fear, reciprocity of effort, constructive handling of disagreements, authenticity, and mutual support. Simple questions help assess each dimension: can you be vulnerable without fear, do you truly listen, do you find joy together? Contempt and resentment are major warning signs. A lasting relationship requires both partners to actively cultivate trust, respect, and mutual growth, rather than expecting everything to work out naturally.
Self-Assessment: Is Your Relationship Emotionally Healthy? 15 Essential Questions
You ask yourself the question in silence, sometimes late at night: is everything really okay in my relationship? This is a legitimate concern. Contrary to what romantic films suggest, the emotional health of a relationship is not a given. It is built, cultivated, and measured.
As a CBT psychopractitioner, I regularly support couples who wonder whether their relationship is "normal" or whether something is off. The good news? There are reliable indicators for assessing your relationship's emotional health. And contrary to popular belief, it is not conflict that destroys a relationship — it is the way it is handled.
Why This Self-Assessment Matters
Before diving into the 15 questions, let's understand why this introspection counts.
Psychologist John Gottman's research has shown that he can predict a breakup with 93% accuracy by observing a few key behaviors. His work has revolutionized our understanding of lasting relationships. But you don't need to be an expert to sense when something is wrong.
An emotionally healthy relationship is characterized by:
- Emotional safety: you feel confident expressing your needs
- Reciprocity: the effort does not come from one side only
- Constructive conflict management: you can disagree without tearing each other down
- Authenticity: you can be yourself without fear of rejection
- Mutual support: you feel supported during difficult times
If one of these dimensions is missing, it's a signal. Not a verdict — a warning sign.
The 15 Questions to Assess Your Relationship's Emotional Health
Answer each question honestly. There are no right or wrong answers — just the truth.
Communication and Emotional Expression
1. Can you express your needs without fear of rejection or anger?Let's take a concrete example. Marie needs more time together. She tells her partner: "I'd like us to spend more evenings just the two of us." If her partner listens, understands, and looks for solutions together, that's a good sign. If she receives contempt, a counter-attack, or silence, that's a problem.
2. Do you listen to your partner without trying to be right?Active listening — really listening — is rare. We often listen while thinking about our reply. In a healthy relationship, you can let your partner finish, even when you disagree.
3. Do you feel that your feelings are validated, even when your partner doesn't share them?This isn't about agreeing on everything. It's about saying: "I understand that you feel sad, even if I see things differently."
Trust and Safety
4. Do you trust your partner, even when they're not with you?Trust is not naïveté. It is the conviction that your partner acts with integrity. If you constantly check their phone or social media, that's a sign of insecurity. It may reveal patterns of relationship anxiety that are worth exploring.
5. Can you be vulnerable without fear of it being used against you later?Vulnerability means sharing your fears, your insecurities, your dreams. If you're afraid your partner will throw your confessions back in your face during an argument, that's not healthy.
AND YOU?
Where do you stand? Take the test: Couple Communication
A self-assessment test to better understand where you stand.
30 questions · 15 min · PDF report from €1.99
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Analyze your relationship dynamic
Upload a conversation and get an analysis of Gottman’s Four Horsemen, the positive/negative ratio and recurring patterns.
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This is fundamental. Safety is non-negotiable. If you are afraid — of anger, violence, or emotional retaliation — that's a serious warning sign.
Conflict Management
7. Do your arguments end in some resolution, even partial?Couples who last don't argue less. They argue better. A healthy argument leads to mutual understanding, even if the disagreement remains.
8. Can you criticize without showing contempt or attacking the person?As explained in our article on Gottman's 4 horsemen, criticism ("You're always late") is different from contempt ("You're so irresponsible"). Contempt is the most reliable predictor of a breakup.
9. Can you apologize sincerely and forgive?Lasting couples are not perfect. They know how to acknowledge their mistakes and move forward. If one of you stays resentful or refuses to apologize, that's a problem.
Reciprocity and Balance
10. Does the effort to maintain the relationship come from both sides?Do you plan the outings, initiate the serious conversations, manage your partner's emotions? If it's one-sided, you may be caught in a dynamic of emotional dependency. It's exhausting and unsustainable in the long run.
11. Do you enjoy yourselves together, beyond sexual intimacy?Laughing, playing, exploring, creating memories — this is vital. If your relationship is limited to sex or obligations, something is missing.
12. Do you respect each other's need for space and autonomy?A healthy relationship is not enmeshed. You have your friends, your hobbies, your life. This strengthens the relationship, it does not weaken it.
Support and Growth
13. Does your partner encourage you to become the best version of yourself?Or do they discourage you? A healthy partner gently pushes you to grow, to pursue your dreams, to overcome your fears.
14. Do you feel accepted for who you truly are?Not for who you could be, or who your partner would like you to be. But for your essence. If you hide important parts of yourself, it's not an authentic relationship.
15. In a crisis (illness, job loss, grief), is your partner there for you?This is the ultimate test. Beautiful relationships shine in easy moments. Healthy relationships shine in the storms.
Interpreting Your Answers
You don't need to count the "yeses." Instead, look for the patterns:
- Mostly "no" or hesitations: Your relationship is going through a difficult phase. This doesn't mean it's over. It means it's time to act — to communicate, perhaps to seek professional help.
- A mix of "yes" and "no": This is normal. No couple is perfect. But identify the fragile areas and work on them.
- Mostly "yes": You have a healthy foundation. Keep nurturing it.
The Hidden Wounds That Sabotage Couples
Sometimes the answers to these questions are negative not because your partner is bad, but because you (or they) carry wounds. John Bowlby's theories on attachment and Jeffrey Young's schemas show that our childhood experiences shape our adult relationships.
Explore your 18 Young schemas to understand emotional wounds that could be influencing your relationship. Or discover the 5 emotional wounds and their impact on your relationships.The Cognitive Distortions That Kill Couples
Your mind can play tricks on you. You think: "He doesn't love me anymore" because he forgot your birthday. You generalize: "He never thinks about me." These are cognitive distortions. Discover the 10 cognitive distortions that sabotage relationships and how to fight them with CBT.
AND YOU?
Where do you stand? Take the test: Couple Communication
A self-assessment test to better understand where you stand.
30 questions · 15 min · PDF report from €1.99
Take the test →SCANMYLOVE
Analyze your relationship dynamic
Upload a conversation and get an analysis of Gottman’s Four Horsemen, the positive/negative ratio and recurring patterns.
Analyze →Take Action: Analyze Your Conversations
If you have doubts, a powerful method is to examine your actual communications. How do you talk to your partner? What tone do you use in your messages? What does that reveal?
Analyze your couple's conversations to identify hidden patterns. Or use ScanMyLove to decode your messages — a tool designed to reveal the emotional dynamics of your exchanges.The Love Languages: Do You Speak the Same One?
You think you show your love through acts (doing the shopping, fixing things). Your partner needs words (hearing "I love you," compliments). This is a classic misunderstanding.
Discover the 5 love languages and what science really says about them. You may be speaking a different language — and that's okay, as long as you know it.When to Seek Professional Help
You don't need a crisis to seek support. If you answered "no" to more than 5 questions, or if even a single answer deeply troubles you, that's a good reason to talk to a therapist.
Couples therapy is not an admission of failure. It is an investment in your relationship. Just as you maintain your house or your car, you maintain your relationship.
Take Our Psychological Tests
To deepen your understanding, take our psychological tests — they cover attachment, relationship anxiety, emotional dependency, and many other essential dimensions.
Resources to Go Further
If you're wondering whether you really need therapy, check out our complete guide: do I need a therapist?
For couples in difficulty, discover Gottman's 4 antidotes to save your relationship.
Conclusion: Emotional Health Is Cultivated
An emotionally healthy couple is not a destination — it's a journey. It requires awareness, communication, compassion, and courage.
These 15 questions are mirrors. They show you where you are. They do not judge. They simply invite honesty.
If your relationship needs support, I'm here to help. Contact me via psychologieetserenite.com for an initial consultation.
Your relationship deserves better than indifference. It deserves clarity.
Gildas Garrec, CBT psychopractitioner
FAQ
How reliable is this couples emotional health?
Assess your relationship's emotional health with our 15-question self-assessment for couples. This assessment is built on clinically validated scales used in CBT practice. While it doesn't replace a professional diagnosis, it provides a reliable first indicator and a starting point for a productive conversation with a therapist.What should I do if my score indicates a problem?
A concerning score suggests a consultation with a CBT practitioner or clinical psychologist may be beneficial. Evidence-based protocols exist for most of these difficulties, typically producing meaningful improvement in 8 to 16 sessions.Can I track my progress by retaking this test over time?
Yes — retesting every 4 to 8 weeks is a useful way to monitor change, especially during therapy. Your therapist may use similar standardized measures (like GAD-7, PHQ-9, or Beck scales) to track progress objectively and adjust the treatment plan accordingly.
About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 1000 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Serenite. Contributor to Hugging Face and Kaggle.
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