Relationships & Life Stages

Relationship OCD: When Doubt Hijacks Your Relationship

By Therapist Contributer

Most people have occasional doubts in relationships. Relationship OCD is different.

If you find yourself stuck in relentless loops of “What if?” thoughts about your partner or your relationship — thoughts that feel urgent, distressing, and impossible to resolve — you may be dealing with Relationship OCD (ROCD).

Relationship OCD isn’t a sign that something is wrong with your relationship. It’s a sign that OCD has latched onto something you deeply care about.

What is Relationship OCD?

Relationship OCD is a subtype of obsessive-compulsive disorder where intrusive thoughts and doubts center on your romantic relationship or partner. These thoughts are unwanted, repetitive, and emotionally charged — and they don’t go away no matter how much you analyze them.

Common ROCD thoughts include:
• What if I don’t really love my partner?
• What if I’m settling?
• What if this relationship isn’t right and I’ll regret staying?
• What if I should feel more in love than I do?
• What if my partner has a flaw I can’t get past?

The problem isn’t the presence of doubt. It’s how your brain treats doubt as something that must be solved before you can feel okay.

How Relationship OCD Keeps You Stuck

Relationship OCD follows the same cycle as other forms of OCD.

A doubt pops up.
Anxiety spikes.
You analyze, check your feelings, compare, seek reassurance, or mentally review.
You get brief relief.
The doubt comes back — usually louder.

I facilitated a public education webinar for the Anxiety and Depression Association of America (ADAA) on Relationship OCD that walks through this exact maintenance cycle and why it’s so convincing. OCD teaches your brain that certainty is required for safety, even though certainty in relationships doesn’t exist.

What Relationship OCD Is Not

This is an important and often relieving distinction.

Relationship OCD is not:
• proof you’re with the wrong person
• a lack of commitment
• a sign you’re emotionally avoidant
• evidence that your relationship is doomed

OCD tends to target what matters most. When relationships are meaningful to you, they become a prime target for obsessive doubt.

Quick Self-Check: Could This Be Relationship OCD?

This isn’t a diagnosis, but see what resonates.

• You constantly analyze your feelings to see if they’re “right”
• You compare your relationship to others or to how it should feel
• You seek reassurance from friends, family, or the internet
• You replay conversations or moments looking for proof
• Reassurance helps briefly, then stops working
• You avoid commitment decisions out of fear of being wrong
• Thinking about your relationship increases anxiety rather than comfort
• You believe certainty about love should be achievable if you try hard enough

If several of these fit, Relationship OCD may be driving the distress — not your relationship.

How Treatment Helps

The most effective treatment for Relationship OCD is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) with Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP).

ERP helps you learn that:
• doubt is uncomfortable, not dangerous
• you don’t need certainty to live a meaningful life
• engaging with thoughts keeps OCD alive — changing your response weakens it

Instead of trying to “figure out” the thought, treatment focuses on building tolerance for uncertainty and disengaging from compulsive mental habits.

Top Tips to Reduce Relationship OCD

  1. Stop chasing certainty
    Healthy relationships don’t come with guarantees. The goal isn’t to feel sure — it’s to live in alignment with your values even when doubt is present.
  2. Treat reassurance like a compulsion
    Reassurance brings short-term relief but strengthens OCD long term. Try delaying or reducing reassurance, even a little.
  3. Name the pattern, not the thought
    Instead of asking whether the thought is true, ask whether this is an OCD-style doubt loop.
  4. Practice allowing the thought
    Try responding with “Maybe, maybe not,” and continue with your day. This isn’t avoidance — it’s retraining your brain.
  5. Let values lead, not feelings
    Feelings fluctuate. Values don’t. Showing up with care, honesty, and intention matters more than how certain you feel.
  6. Get specialized support
    OCD responds best to targeted treatment. Working with a therapist trained in CBT and ERP can be a game changer.

Learn More

If you’d like a deeper understanding of how Relationship OCD works and how it’s treated, you can watch the ADAA webinar “What is Relationship OCD?” which I facilitated as part of ADAA’s public education programming: click here to watch.

Final Thought

Relationship OCD can feel deeply personal and incredibly convincing. But it’s treatable. With the right support, you can step out of the doubt cycle and reconnect with your relationship — and your life — in a more grounded, values-driven way.

If you’re struggling, you’re not broken. Your brain is just stuck — and it can learn a new way forward.

Dr. Debra Kissen is a licensed clinical psychologist and the CEO and founder of Light On Anxiety CBT Treatment Centers....

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