Being in a relationship with a workaholic—whether it’s a partner, friend, or family member—can be exhausting and isolating. When someone’s life revolves entirely around work, you can start to feel invisible, as though you’re competing with spreadsheets and deadlines for a place in their life. While ambition and drive are genuinely admirable qualities, an unbalanced work-life dynamic can quietly erode the foundation of even the strongest relationships. If you’re navigating life with someone who’s always working, you’re not alone—and there are real, practical strategies to help you reconnect, protect your own wellbeing, and find a healthier dynamic together.
Why Workaholism Happens — And Why It’s Not About You
Before anything else, it helps to understand the “why” behind workaholism. For many people, overworking is driven by anxiety, fear of failure, identity tied to productivity, or simply the way they were raised. It’s rarely a conscious rejection of the people they love. Understanding this doesn’t excuse the impact on your relationship, but it does shift the conversation from blame to empathy—which is where real change begins.
Research published in the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology found that workaholics often score higher on neuroticism and compulsive tendencies, meaning their overwork is less a choice and more a deeply ingrained coping mechanism. Recognising this can help you approach conversations with compassion rather than resentment.
7 Ways to Navigate Life with Someone Who’s Always Working
1. Understand Their Mindset Without Enabling It
Before jumping to frustration, take time to understand why they are so work-focused. Have they tied their self-worth to their career? Are they anxious about financial security? Do they genuinely love what they do and lose track of time? Understanding the root cause helps you approach the issue with empathy rather than resentment. However, understanding doesn’t mean enabling—you can be compassionate without allowing the imbalance to continue unchecked.
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2. Communicate Without Ultimatums
When you’re feeling neglected, it’s tempting to issue an ultimatum: “It’s me or the job.” But ultimatums rarely produce lasting change—they produce resentment. Instead, use “I” statements to express how the dynamic is affecting you: “I feel disconnected when we don’t have time together” is far more productive than “You never prioritise me.” Choose calm moments—not mid-crisis when they’re stressed—to have these conversations, and be specific about what you need.
3. Create Protected Time Together
If you leave connection to chance with a workaholic, it won’t happen. Instead, schedule non-negotiable time together and treat it with the same seriousness as a work meeting. A weekly date night, a Sunday morning walk, or even a shared dinner with phones away can create the consistency your relationship needs. The key is to make these moments predictable and protected—not contingent on whether work is quiet enough.
4. Build a Fulfilling Life Outside the Relationship
One of the most empowering things you can do is invest in your own life. Pursue your own hobbies, friendships, and goals. When your happiness doesn’t hinge entirely on your partner’s availability, you feel less resentful when work pulls them away—and you become a more interesting, grounded person in the process. This isn’t about giving up on the relationship; it’s about not withering while you wait for it to improve. If you’re exploring your own identity, our piece on embracing your true self-worth offers some powerful starting points.
5. Set Healthy Boundaries at Home
Boundaries aren’t just about what your workaholic partner can’t do—they’re also about what you won’t tolerate. Decide together that work calls don’t happen during dinner, that weekends have at least one work-free day, or that devices are put away by a certain time each evening. Boundaries only work when both people agree to them and understand the “why” behind them, so make sure these conversations are collaborative rather than one-sided.
6. Acknowledge Their Achievements Genuinely
If you only ever criticise the time they spend working, they’ll learn to hide it from you rather than reduce it. Balance your frustration with genuine recognition of their hard work and achievements. People who feel appreciated are more open to feedback and change. Saying “I’m proud of what you’ve built—and I miss spending time with you” is a very different message than constant complaint, and it’s far more likely to open a meaningful conversation.
7. Consider Couples Counselling or Professional Support
Sometimes the patterns are too entrenched to shift through conversation alone. A couples therapist can help both of you understand the underlying dynamics, communicate more effectively, and build strategies together. There’s no shame in seeking help—in fact, reaching out to a professional is one of the most proactive steps a couple can take. Individual therapy for the workaholic can also help them unpack the anxiety or identity issues that drive their overwork.
When Workaholism Becomes a Relationship Deal-Breaker
Not every workaholic relationship is salvageable—and that’s important to acknowledge. If you’ve communicated your needs clearly, set boundaries, sought support, and nothing changes, it may be worth evaluating whether the relationship is serving your long-term wellbeing. A partner who genuinely doesn’t have the capacity or desire to show up for you emotionally is not a partner in the fullest sense, regardless of how much they love you in theory. Recognising the signs of emotional unavailability early can save years of heartache. Our article on what a truly healthy relationship looks like is worth revisiting if you’re questioning where the line is.
Protecting Your Own Mental Health
Living with someone who’s always working takes a genuine toll on your mental and emotional health. You may experience loneliness, anxiety, low self-esteem, or even begin to question your own worth. It’s essential to name these feelings and address them—not suppress them. Journalling, therapy, regular exercise, meaningful friendships, and even just carving out time for activities that bring you joy are all vital tools. You cannot pour from an empty cup, and your wellbeing matters independently of your relationship status. For more on recovering your sense of self in difficult seasons, read our piece on how to rebuild your life when things fall apart.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a workaholic change their habits?
Yes, but only if they genuinely want to and understand the cost of their behaviour. Change rarely happens because someone is pressured into it—it happens when the workaholic themselves recognises that their work habits are damaging something they value. Therapy, honest communication, and gradual boundary-setting can all support this process, but the motivation must ultimately come from within them.
Is it selfish to want more time with a partner who works a lot?
Absolutely not. Wanting connection, presence, and quality time with your partner is a fundamental human need—not a demand. Relationships require emotional investment from both people. Expressing that need is healthy, honest, and necessary. The key is how you communicate it: from a place of openness rather than accusation.
What if my partner doesn’t see their workaholism as a problem?
This is one of the most common and difficult challenges. If your partner genuinely doesn’t see an issue, try sharing specific examples of the impact their work habits have had on you—not as accusations, but as honest reflections. You might also suggest they speak to a therapist independently, framing it as personal growth rather than problem-fixing. If they remain entirely unwilling to engage, that itself is important information about the relationship’s long-term viability.
Sources & further reading: Harvard Business Review: The Cost of Workaholism | APA: Work Stress and Relationships | Psychology Today: Workaholism and Relationships.
Cassandra Simpson is a wellbeing and relationship writer with a BSc in Psychology and five years of experience working in community mental health support. She writes about love, friendship, boundaries, and the emotional work of belonging — drawing on both academic grounding and the hard-won perspective that comes from navigating her own relationship patterns, friendships, and personal growth in real time. Cassandra trained as a peer support facilitator and has spent years exploring attachment theory, interpersonal dynamics, and the psychology of connection. Her writing is shaped by a deep belief that most relationship struggles come not from failure, but from the absence of honest, accessible information about how human connection actually works.







