Sixty percent of employees have dated a colleague at some point in their career. Among Gen Z workers, 44% report the same, and 11% say they have been in a relationship with their manager. These are not rare events handled behind closed doors. They are common occurrences in workplaces that, for the most part, do not have formal rules about them. Only 30% of employers maintain a written policy on workplace relationships. The rest leave it to discretion, which works until it does not.
Know What Your Company Actually Says
The first step is reading whatever policy exists. Most companies that address workplace dating do so through a code of conduct or employee handbook, not a standalone rule. The language tends to focus on disclosure requirements, restrictions on relationships between supervisors and direct reports, and guidelines around professional behavior. Some organizations require that couples in the same reporting chain notify HR. Others prohibit manager-subordinate relationships outright.
If no policy exists, the absence of a rule is not the same as permission. It means the company has chosen to deal with situations on a case-by-case basis, and the outcome will depend on the people involved, the power dynamic, and how visible the relationship becomes. Assuming you are in the clear because no one has said otherwise is not a strategy. It is a gamble.
The Power Dynamic Is the Real Risk
A relationship between equals on separate teams carries less institutional risk than one between a manager and a direct report. The latter creates a conflict of interest that HR departments are trained to address, even if no complaint has been filed. Decisions about assignments, performance reviews, raises, and promotions are all compromised when the person making them is romantically involved with the person receiving them. It does not matter if both parties believe the relationship has no effect on their work. The perception of favoritism is enough to cause problems.
SHRM research found that 35% of employees have faced unwanted advances from a coworker that made them uncomfortable. That statistic contextualizes the institutional caution. Companies that regulate workplace dating are not doing so because they disapprove of romance. They are managing liability.
Keep It Separate From the Work
Couples who successfully date at work tend to follow a few consistent patterns. They avoid physical affection in the office. They do not discuss the relationship with colleagues unless asked directly. They maintain the same professional tone in meetings that they used before the relationship started. They do not lobby for each other in group discussions or advocate for each other’s work in ways that could be read as favoritism.
This sounds simple. In practice, it requires discipline. The instinct to defend a partner in a meeting, to share credit in a way that feels fair but looks biased, to spend more time near their desk than anyone else’s, is hard to override. The colleagues who notice these patterns may not say anything directly. They will adjust their trust instead.
What Happens If People Are Drawn to You at Work
Physical presence in a shared space over long periods builds familiarity, and familiarity breeds attraction. Some people notice that colleagues respond to them with more attention than the interaction requires. Recognizing the signs you’re attractive in a professional setting can be useful not for vanity, but for awareness. If a coworker is consistently finding reasons to be near you, extending conversations past their natural endpoint, or initiating contact outside of work hours, the dynamic is worth acknowledging before it becomes something that needs managing.
The responsible move is not to ignore the attention or to reciprocate by default. It is to be deliberate about how you respond, and to recognize that the workplace adds a layer of consequence to every interaction that does not exist in a bar or on an app.
Disclosure Is Protection
Telling HR about a workplace relationship feels uncomfortable. It also removes the single biggest risk: the appearance that you were hiding something. If the relationship ends badly, or if a colleague files a complaint, the fact that the relationship was disclosed in advance provides a documented timeline. It shows that both parties entered the arrangement knowingly and that the company had the opportunity to set conditions.
Companies with disclosure policies in place report 40% fewer conflicts related to employee relationships. That number reflects what happens when transparency replaces secrecy. It does not prevent breakups from being messy. It prevents messy breakups from turning into HR investigations.
When It Ends, the Job Stays
Most workplace relationships do not last. The ones that end well do so because both people agree to return to a professional baseline without lingering resentment. The ones that end poorly can make a daily commute feel unbearable. Shared meetings, mutual friends in the office, and unavoidable proximity turn a private disappointment into a public performance.
The safest approach is to agree in advance on how a breakup will be handled at work. That conversation is awkward, but less awkward than the alternative. If both people commit to professionalism and keep the personal fallout out of the office, the transition is manageable. If one person does not, the other has limited options: a conversation with HR, a request to transfer teams, or the decision to outlast the discomfort.
The Rules That Actually Matter
Workplace dating is not going away. People spend 8 or more hours a day in the same building, on the same calls, working toward the same deadlines. Attraction follows proximity, and proximity is built into the structure of employment. The trouble comes not from the relationship itself but from how it is handled. Know the policy. Avoid reporting-chain entanglements. Keep the relationship out of the office. Disclose early. Plan for the ending before you need to. None of these steps are romantic. All of them are practical, and practical is what keeps a career intact when the relationship does not.

