Lesbian Age Gap Relationships: What You Need to Know

Age-gap relationships between women are more common than your think. According to one dataset, 18% of people in female same-sex relationships (to use the authors’ language around gender) have an age gap between partners of ten or more years, compared to 4% of people in female-male relationships. And according to a more informal survey by Autostraddle, of respondents between ages 18 and 29, 77% were open to being romantically and/or sexually involved with women ten or more years older, while 97% were open to women 5 to 10 years older. Of respondents age 30 years or older, 61% were open to women ten or more years younger, 91% to women five or more years younger, 87% in women ten or more years older, and 98% in women or more years older.

In other words, not only are lesbian age-gap relationships way more common than heterosexual ones, they’re also possible throughout our community. Plus, sexy age-gap couples like Sarah Paulson and Holland Taylor (32-year gap), Rachel Maddow and Susan Mikula (14-year gap), and Tig Notaro and Stephanie Allynne (13-year gap) keep lesbian May-December relationships in the spotlight.

There are a lot of theories about why this is. Could it be that because queer relationships are already outside the norm in terms of gender, we’re more willing to venture outside the norm in terms of age? Could it be because we have broader beauty standards, more experience eroticizing power dynamics, and a love of subversion? Does it matter?

If you’re considering a lesbian age-gap relationship, wondering if you should broaden your dating pool, or already happily dating someone much older or younger and interested in growing a healthy, loving relationship, here’s what you need to know.

Don’t Limit Yourself to An Age Range

One of my most successfully matched couples, Brianna and Jill, have an 18-year age gap. “Really quickly I realized it was about the connection, so as long as that was there – which it is – then there’s really no other thing to think about,” says Brianna. If they’d focused on age, instead of on possibility, they never would have met.

Age is only one small part of having things in common with a romantic and sexual partner. Does it really make a difference, or is it an excuse to write someone off before getting to know them? I hear excuses like “I don’t want to waste my time,” “someone younger won’t have the same experiences I do,” “someone older won’t be fun,” “I’m afraid we won’t be able to connect” – and the common denominator is fear. What would it be like to stop letting fear run your life, and let love run it instead?

On the surface, an age difference can look dramatic. One of you was in grad school while the other was graduating grade 8. One of you grew up on Breakfast Club and Point Break and one of you grew up on Mean Girls and Blue Crush. One of you remembers where she was on 9/11 and one of you was a toddler. But in real life, it’s not that big of a deal. Sharing interests, ambitions, and values is far more important.

If you’re on dating apps, take a moment to expand your age range. You might be surprised by who you meet.

So How Do You Make a Lesbian Age-Gap Relationship Work?

Your relationship can be happy and fulfilling no matter the age difference. But in general, the bigger the age difference, the more deliberate both sides should be. Even if you appear to be at similar life stages, like both a year out of a long-term relationship or making a career transition, the older partner is usually more established professionally and financially. The younger partner might have a different tolerance for uncertainty. Even if it feels like you’re equals, age and these other factors can create unintentional power dynamics within a relationship. It’s better to acknowledge age-gap power dynamics together, especially in your big-picture conversations, than it is to pretend they don’t exist.

No two people will share the exact same cultural touchstones, but differences can be particularly clear in age-gap relationships. Think of these differences as opportunities to really explore your partner’s viewpoint and to get to know them on a deeper, more fundamental level, rather than something that’s lacking. She hasn’t seen your favorite movies? Now you get to have movie nights and watch them together. You’ve never heard of their favorite artist? Now they get to introduce you to their work. You just can’t agree on what radio station to listen to on long drives? Now you get to listen to that audiobook you both put on hold at the library instead. Your differences are a chance to learn more about each other and the world, not a disadvantage that will hold you back.

Don’t focus on lost time. Especially when one partner is much further along their life path, it can be tempting to wish you had met when you were both younger or that you were closer in age. It’s okay to feel that way, but focus more on enjoying the time you get to share now.

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