Risk of divorce drops with every year of marriage (UK research)

MarriageMailOnline 8 February 2016
If you are in your first few blissful years of marriage, you might want to look away now.
For a study has found that for every a year a couple stays together, the less likely they are to divorce – and it’s the first decade that’s the hardest.
So while honeymooning couples have a one in four chance of splitting, for those who reach their golden wedding anniversary it’s just one in 1,500.
The odds, which were worked out for the Marriage Foundation think-tank, have cast doubt on the apparent ‘silver splitter’ trend which says divorce and separation are becoming more common among older couples.
Official figures have pointed to a worrying rise in divorce rates among the over-45s and a doubling of numbers of divorcees aged over 65.
However, Marriage Foundation analyst Harry Benson said that the ‘silver divorce’ trend is down to the fact people are marrying at older ages.
He added: ‘Divorces are happening among older generations, but rates by year of marriage are almost unchanged since the 1970s.
‘With each year that a couple makes their relationship work, the easier it becomes for them to stay together.’ The report, based on ONS statistics, found that the risk of divorce for a couple married for ten years is one in four.
But after 20 years it drops to one in eight, while being together for 30 years means your risk is just one in 25.
And after 40 years, the chance of splitting is down to one in 150. At the 50th wedding anniversary the prospect of divorce has shrunk to a tiny one in 1,500.
READ MORE: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3436483/Risk-divorce-drops-year-marriage-newlyweds-one-four-chance-splitting-chance-one-1-500-couples-reach-golden-anniversary.html

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