Will a Sleep Divorce Help Your Relationship? Here’s What Experts and Couples Think

When snoring and other issues keep one partner awake, sleeping in separate beds or bedrooms can make all the difference. But is a sleep divorce bad for the relationship?

When people love each other but dread bedtime together, a sleep divorce may be the solution.

One-third of couples say their partner’s snoring, loud breathing or gasping for air interrupts their sleep, according to the 2025 Global Sleep Survey by Resmed, a medical device company.

Women seem to be more affected — 20% say their partner disrupts their sleep every night, compared to 11% of men who have the same complaint.

Half of U.S. couples say they sometimes opt for a "sleep divorce" by sleeping in separate bedrooms, the survey found.

Psychiatrist Dr. Joshua Weiner has been married for 25 years and has had a sleep divorce for 10 years.

"It's embarrassing to some degree," Weiner told NBC Washington in June 2025.

"(But) just raising awareness of this, letting people know that this is a common problem I think will help normalize it."

Once he brings up the topic, many couples tell him they have the same arrangement, Weiner said.

Eli McCann, a lawyer and humor columnist in Salt Lake City, Utah, tried out the concept by accident when a hotel reservation didn't turn out as expected.

"My husband and I stayed in a hotel room last night that had two beds and I now understand Lucy and Ricky Ricardo," he wrote on X.

"Slept so well I saw the face of God. I look 20 again. I genuinely think my life expectancy might be 150 now."

McCann, 41, describes his home sleeping situation as becoming "absurd" over the years. The couple's two dogs sleep in bed with them, and McCann's husband is a very active sleeper and "instinctive snuggler," he says, meaning McCann gets a sliver of the bed’s territory.

"At the hotel, it felt amazing to spread out on my own space without bumping into another body," McCann tells TODAY.com.

"I also didn’t have to worry about my own movements disturbing anyone. I fell asleep almost instantly — very abnormal for me — and slept through the night."

He recalls that his great-grandparents slept in separate rooms when he was growing up because they couldn’t agree on room temperature. McCann once thought they must have hated each other, but now believes they were geniuses.

What Is a Sleep Divorce?

Snoring, body heat, restless legs, insomnia, different schedules and a yearning for personal space are just some of the reasons why some happy couples choose to sleep apart, whether in separate beds in the same room, or in separate rooms altogether.

The arrangements can vary. Michael Breus, a Los Angeles-area clinical psychologist who is also known as “The Sleep Doctor,” told TODAY he knows some couples who sleep separately during the week, but together on the weekends. It may be worth trying it out three times a week at first to see how it feels, Dr. Mehmet Oz advised.

TODAY’s Carson Daly and his wife, Siri Daly, started sleeping in separate bedrooms while she was pregnant with their fourth child, Goldie, born on March 26, 2020.

“I was served my sleep-divorce papers a few years ago,” he explained on TODAY. “It’s the best thing that ever happened to us. We both, admittedly, slept better apart.”

Actress Cameron Diaz also supports the concept.

“We should normalize separate bedrooms” for married couples, she said in December 2023.

Sleep Divorce Pros

Some couples say the arrangement can improve their marriage, leaving them more rested, and reducing conflict and resentment.

"You're going to be much more agitated, irritated, angry at your spouse if you wake up exhausted and they're the reason that you got a poor night's sleep," Weiner said.

Some therapists say a sleep divorce can lead to better sex and bring back desire since couples may no longer be taking each other for granted.

“They have to think about it and make sex a priority,” Kate Balestrieri, a psychologist and sex therapist, told The New York Times in 2025. “And talk with each other more about when they’re going to be sexual — and how.”

Elizabeth and Ryan Pearson listed snoring and different bed times among the reasons they've been sleeping in different rooms for years.

"Once we connected the dots that we slept so much better separately, we really embraced it," Elizabeth Pearson told TODAY in a segment that aired in December 2023.

"To wake up resentful from not having a good night of sleep... that's not great for sex life and intimacy," Ryan Pearson added. "Sleep is the key to happiness."

Sleep Divorce Cons

But Dr. Carol Ash, a sleep expert at RWJ Barnabas Health in New Jersey, said she wants couples to sleep together because it's healthier for the relationship.

"When you sleep with a bed partner, you have synchronization and stabilization of the pattern of sleep brain waves," Ash told TODAY during the same segment.

"It improves the quality of your sleep and that synchronization, we believe, is responsible for a healthy relationship."

Sleeping together leads to bonding hormones being released; plus, people have better mental health, she noted.

Examine the reason why you are sleeping apart, Ash advised: If snoring is the problem, look into medical interventions.

Maybe one spouse needs to lose weight or stop sleeping on their back to stop snoring, Weiner advised. You can purchase a shirt with a pocket in the back to insert a tennis ball, which will keep you sleeping on your side.

If you're sleeping apart due to a relationship conflict, it's important to solve that, Ash noted.

How to Make a Sleep Divorce Work

Tamara Green, a New York couples therapist, says she has seen the arrangement improve patients’ relationships and love lives. It’s “absolutely” still possible to maintain a good sexual connection, she noted.

“They get enough rest and they feel like they are able to hear each other out and get their needs met,” Green tells TODAY.com.

Still, the subject can be difficult to broach with a partner. Green had these tips for people who want to try sleeping in a bed or bedroom of their own:

Discuss the New Arrangements Before Sleeping Apart

Start with letting your partner know why you love and appreciate him, then bring up that you haven’t been sleeping well.

Stay away from the word “you,” as in, “You keep me up at night.” Instead, use the word “we” — “We don’t seem to have a completely restful night of sleep because we just have different sleep styles.” That way, you’re not blaming, but explaining. When couples do this, the defenses go way down, Green says.

Suggest a change: “I’m wondering if you’re open to trying things that may work for both of us. I only bring this up because I deeply care about you and our relationship and the quality of our sleep.”

Schedule Together Time Before Heading to Separate Beds

Take opportunities to touch each other throughout the day. Hug in the kitchen or snuggle while watching TV, for example, Green says. Take quick moments to feel excited with your partner.

Schedule sex in your calendar and make it a priority on those days, she advises. Don’t forget to schedule date nights, too.

Express Your Appreciation

Green suggests saying: “I’m so grateful that we can work these things out together. That’s why I fell in love with you in the first place.” Or: “I really appreciate that you’re hearing how hard it is for me to sleep.”