There is no official expiry date on a situationship. But you already know when it has passed. You felt it the day you stopped expecting things to change and started managing around the fact that they never would.
The question of how long should a situationship last does not have a universal answer, but it has a personal one: it should last only as long as it takes to either define it or leave it. Once a situationship has settled into a stable pattern of indefiniteness, once neither person is actively pushing it toward resolution or ending, it has gone on too long. The question is not how many months it has been. The question is whether anything has structurally changed in that time, and whether you have started building your life around something that was never formally offered to you.
Situationships that have lasted for over a year without becoming real relationships are not slow burns that are almost ready. They are arrangements that have been accepted by at least one person, usually the one who should have asked for more sooner. These twelve signs tell you when the situationship crossed from something with potential into something that is costing you more than it is giving back.
You have stopped expecting it to become a relationship
There is a moment in every long situationship where the hope quietly shifts from active to passive. You stop expecting him to bring up the conversation. You stop mentally rehearsing what you would say when he finally does. You start operating as though the current arrangement is the permanent arrangement, not because you have accepted it but because expecting change became too exhausting to sustain. That shift is the first sign that the situationship has gone on longer than it should have.
Expectation is not naivety. In the early stages of a connection with real potential, expecting it to develop is appropriate. When you have been in something for long enough that your expectations have quietly recalibrated to match its limitations, your own internal accounting is telling you something your mouth has not said yet.
You have adjusted your wants to fit what is available
Think about what you actually wanted when this started and compare it to what you are currently accepting. Not what you told yourself you wanted, but what you actually came into this hoping for. Most women who have been in a situationship for a long time can trace a slow and gradual process of want-reduction: the things she needed that felt non-negotiable in the beginning that she quietly stopped counting as requirements somewhere in the middle.
That adjustment is not maturity. It is not the reasonable moderation of unrealistic expectations. It is a woman slowly reshaping herself to fit an arrangement that was never designed with her in mind. The longer a situationship lasts, the more of those small adjustments accumulate, until you are living inside a version of yourself that was built around someone who never asked you to be her.
The question of what you are has stopped feeling urgent
Early in a situationship, the undefined nature of the arrangement tends to produce a low-level urgency. You want to know. The not knowing sits uncomfortably. That discomfort is healthy because it signals that your expectations for yourself are still intact. When the urgency fades, when the question of what you are starts feeling like old news rather than unfinished business, it is usually because you have been in the undefined space long enough that it has started to feel normal.
Normal is not the same as acceptable. Something can become familiar and remain insufficient. The fading of urgency does not mean the need for definition has been met. It means the need for definition has been suppressed by the length of time spent without it. Asking yourself honestly whether you are in a situationship becomes harder the longer you have been in one, because the familiarity starts to feel like an answer when it is not.
If the first three signs already describe where you are, The Intimate Clarity Bundle has the exact words for the conversation that should have happened months ago and still can.
Get the BundleYou have built your schedule around his availability without him building his around yours
How long does a situationship last when one person's schedule is organized around the other's? As long as the person doing the organizing allows it to. The calendaring asymmetry of a long situationship is one of its most telling features: she clears Thursday evenings on the chance he might be free. She does not commit to plans with other people until she knows whether he is reaching out that week. Her availability has become a standing accommodation for his convenience.
He has not made the same accommodation. His schedule runs the same whether she is available or not, because she has never required anything different of him. The situationship has gone on too long when this pattern is so established that it no longer feels like an imposition. It just feels like how things are.
You know more about his patterns than about his intentions
After months in a situationship, most women become experts in his behavior. They can predict his texting patterns with reasonable accuracy. They know what kind of week will produce warmth and what kind of week will produce distance. They have mapped the rhythms of his availability with a precision that would be impressive if it were not so sad. What they do not know, because it has never been said out loud, is what he actually intends for this.
Behavioral expertise in the absence of stated intention is one of the clearest signs that a situationship has lasted too long. You should not have to predict him. You should know him, the version of him that has made a deliberate choice about you, not the version you have been reading from the outside like a text written in a language nobody taught you.
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You are in.
Your first letter is on its way. Check your inbox.You have defended the arrangement to people who questioned it
When people who love you started asking questions about what this is, what did you say? If you found yourself defending the arrangement, explaining why the undefined nature was actually fine, describing his good qualities as evidence that the lack of definition was beside the point, that defense is significant. You were not defending him. You were defending the investment you had already made, because acknowledging that the arrangement was insufficient would have required confronting how much of yourself you had already spent on it.
The people who questioned it were not wrong. They were outside the hope that was keeping you in it, which is exactly the perspective that tends to see these situations most clearly. If you spent months defending a situationship to the people who cared about you most, the situationship had already gone on longer than those people thought it should.
You have started measuring time in months rather than conversations
The situationship how long does it last question tends to get answered in calendar terms: three months, six months, a year. But the more honest measure is in conversations: how many real conversations about what you are have happened in all that time? In most long situationships, the answer is zero or one. All the time that has passed has produced warmth and contact and intimacy but not the single conversation that would change the structure of the arrangement.
Time without conversation is not progress. A situationship that has lasted a year without the defining conversation has not been building for a year. It has been maintaining for a year. The length of time you have put in does not create a right to the relationship. The conversation creates the relationship. Everything else is just time passing inside an arrangement that nobody has formally changed.
If you have been measuring months instead of conversations, The Intimate Clarity Bundle has the exact language to finally have the one conversation that matters more than all the time that has passed.
Get the BundleThe connection has become your social life rather than part of it
One of the quieter costs of a long situationship is how it reorganizes your social world around itself. You spend a significant portion of your available emotional energy on the connection. Other friendships get less of you. Dating other people stops happening, not because you decided against it but because the situationship fills enough space that the impulse to look elsewhere fades. Your world gradually narrows to accommodate an arrangement that has never formally committed to being part of your life at all.
When the situationship has become the primary relationship in your life, it has gone on far too long. Not because connection is wrong, but because the intimacy you are devoting to it has never been reciprocated with the formal commitment that would justify that level of investment.
You no longer think seriously about what else you might want
The question of how long should you stay in a situationship becomes easiest to answer when you ask what you are giving up to stay in it. Not what you might lose by leaving. What you are not allowing yourself to have by remaining. Are you meeting other people? Are you seriously considering what kind of relationship you actually want with someone who is willing to give it to you? Or has the situationship become so central to your emotional landscape that the space for imagining something different has closed?
A woman who has stopped seriously thinking about what else she might want has made a decision that deserves to be made consciously. Not as a default that happened while she was waiting for the situationship to change, but as an actual choice made with full awareness of what it is costing her.
The warmth feels like enough on good days and not enough on bad ones
After a long situationship, women often describe living in two simultaneous realities. On the good days, the warmth is present and the connection feels real and the absence of a formal commitment seems like a technicality rather than a problem. On the bad days, which come more frequently as the situationship ages, the lack of definition feels like a gap that the warmth cannot fill no matter how genuine it is. The oscillation between those two experiences is exhausting in a way that a real relationship, for all its difficulties, does not tend to produce.
A relationship should not feel sufficient only on its best days. The security of a real relationship holds you on the ordinary days and the difficult ones too. If the warmth in your situationship only works when everything else is also going well, it is not providing you with the kind of foundation that love is supposed to provide.
Leaving now would feel like a bigger loss than it should
One of the clearest markers of a situationship that has lasted too long is the scale of the loss that leaving would now represent. Early in a situationship, leaving is painful but possible. The investment has not yet compounded to the point where the idea of walking away feels catastrophic. After months or a year or more, the accumulated investment makes leaving feel like losing something enormous, which is exactly how the situationship sustains itself past the point where it should have been resolved.
The loss feels disproportionate because you have been investing at relationship level for relationship-length periods of time without relationship-level security. You have built something significant out of materials that were never formally yours. Ending a situationship that has gone on too long is harder than ending one that has not, but it is also more necessary, because the longer it continues, the more expensive it becomes to stay and the more painful it will eventually be to leave.
You already know the answer to the question you have been afraid to ask
Here is the most honest sign that a situationship has gone on too long: you know. Not with certainty, not with evidence, but with the quiet knowledge that lives below the hope, the awareness that if he was going to choose you formally he probably would have done it by now. That knowledge does not mean the conversation is not worth having. It means the conversation is overdue.
The woman who has been in a situationship for long enough to recognize herself in all twelve of these signs is not a woman who was foolish or naive. She is a woman who cared about something and stayed in it longer than it warranted because caring made leaving feel like giving up. The giving up is not leaving the situationship. The giving up is staying in it past the point where it can give you anything real. Recognizing the signs that you are in a situationship is how you stop giving something that was never going to give you what you came for.