Try GOLD - Free
I thought nice men were undateable – I was wrong
The Independent
|October 14, 2025
A new study has confirmed what many of us have long suspected: the nicer a man is, the less likely he is to get laid.
Researchers looked at how personality traits correlate with relationship status across nearly 4,000 people in Australia, Denmark and Sweden. The men who scored highest on agreeableness - basically a mark of how nice they were - were statistically the least likely to have a partner.
Obviously, the temptation is to assume that women (and the study focused on hetero relationships) are all secretly looking for a bit of a bastard, but that's not what the research is saying - and, irrespective of the particular pitch and tenor of someone's daddy issues, I think you'd struggle to find a woman who is actively looking for a cruel man.
What the research seems to imply, though, is that “niceness” has the romantic appeal of a council tax reminder letter - useful, perhaps, but not exactly the stuff of fantasy.
Which does make sense, in a way. Nice equates to bland - describing someone as “nice” carries the same energy as saying a meal is “fine”; it's technically positive but spiritually damning. All of which is quite depressing when you consider the fact that, when “nice” is broken down into its constituent parts - empathy, cooperativeness and patience - finding a nice, “agreeable” partner is basically the Holy Grail. I should know: I found one.
But not before many, many years of dating the other kind. It wasn't that I didn't want someone nice - it was just that, on a list of desirable traits, “nice” came slightly below “has reliable wifi”. Of course he should be nice, I would think, but first he should be funny, exciting, outgoing...
In those days, I gravitated towards charming, gregarious types with big egos. The study authors found that extroversion counted as a significant advantage for men - outgoing, confident males were much more likely to be in relationships (extroverted women, on the other hand, saw no such advantage - a reminder that society still prefers its women passive).
This story is from the October 14, 2025 edition of The Independent.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Independent
The Independent
ON THIS DAY
1803: Composer Hector Berlioz was born near Grenoble.
1 min
December 11, 2025
The Independent
Slot breathes easier as Jones sparkles in diamond shape
It isn’t the most infamous interview a Liverpool player has conducted after a match of late. Not any more, anyway. But after PSV Eindhoven won 4-1 to inflict Liverpool’s joint-heaviest European defeat at Anfield and take their run to nine losses in 12 games, Curtis Jones declared that they were “in the shit”.
3 mins
December 11, 2025
The Independent
‘It positions the harassment of migrants as a public duty’
Anti-immigrant activists are travelling to northern France to intimidate asylum seekers. Holly Bancroft investigates this disturbing new trend, and the far-right groups promoting it
5 mins
December 11, 2025
The Independent
Doctors consider last-ditch Streeting bid to avoid strike
Health secretary Wes Streeting has accused the doctors' union of \"playing games with patients' lives\" by delaying a decision on whether to call off resident doctors' strikes after he made them a fresh offer to settle.
3 mins
December 11, 2025
The Independent
Bestselling English novelist Sophie Kinsella dies at 55
The author Sophie Kinsella has died aged 55, her family have said. Kinsella, best known for her bestselling Shopaholic novels, was diagnosed with glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer, in 2022. She revealed the news to the public last year.
3 mins
December 11, 2025
The Independent
How time caught up with reality TV's top starmaker
With ‘The Next Act’, Simon Cowell has effectively remade ‘The X Factor’ for Netflix - and it’s bleak
5 mins
December 11, 2025
The Independent
Alarm as Britain revokes citizenship of hundreds
System allows for 'shocking' racial disparity, finds report
4 mins
December 11, 2025
The Independent
PARR EXCELLENCE
Martin Parr's photographs are widely, and justly, celebrated. But some critics claim to detect a hint of snobbery. The truth is that he was obsessed with people
4 mins
December 11, 2025
The Independent
Parlous States: let's face it, America has switched sides
What does Donald Trump want from Europeans? It’s a question we didn’t use to have to ask ourselves about American presidents.
4 mins
December 11, 2025
The Independent
Kalu's Turner Prize win is a standout victory for real art
The sculptor's success is a seismic moment for diversity, but equally as significant, argues Mark Hudson, is her emphasis on elements the competition has lost sight of in recent years
3 mins
December 11, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
