A 30-year longitudinal study tracking 628 British couples, published in 2026, found measurable, persistent wellbeing costs to the partners of entrepreneurs — not just the entrepreneurs themselves. In Denmark, a separate study found that spouses of new entrepreneurs were significantly more likely than spouses of non-entrepreneurs to be prescribed sleep aids and anti-anxiety medication within two years of a business launching. In Australia, a third study found measurable drops in psychological health among partners whose spouses entered self-employment.

How entrepreneurial stress travels from the founder to the partner

The spillover-crossover model, developed by Bakker and Demerouti, describes how occupational stress enters and damages intimate relationships in two sequential stages. Spillover is the transfer of work stress into the home domain — the entrepreneur who is physically present at dinner but cognitively still in the business, the conversations that keep returning to decisions and problems, the financial worry that sits in the room without being named. Crossover is what happens next: the partner absorbs that stress through the interaction itself, and their own emotional state, sleep quality, and life satisfaction are measurably affected.

The mechanism is resource depletion rather than simple mood contagion. A founder returning home having exhausted their emotional, cognitive, and relational resources on the business does not have those resources available for their partner. They may be in the same room. They are not present in the way the relationship requires. The partner reads this through behavioural cues — reduced eye contact, shorter responses, physical tension, distraction — and experiences a crossover of that depletion into their own state.

The Danish prescription data is the most objective evidence for this. Medication uptake is a pharmacological record of the stress crossover, not a self-report. It has a clear causal temporal structure — the business launches, and within two years the partner is more likely to need pharmacological support for sleep and anxiety. The entrepreneur’s decision to start a business produced a measurable health cost in the person who did not make that decision.

What the 30-year data shows about who bears which cost

The British longitudinal study found that the type of venture determines which strain mechanism dominates. For entrepreneurs working alone, the household bears the financial impact most heavily — the income hit pulls household finances with it, and financial stress becomes the primary relational strain. For ventures with employees, the relational strain is more prominent than the financial one.

The value-importance moderator matters here. A partner who places high importance on family time, stability, and leisure will experience significantly higher costs from the same founding behaviour than a partner with a higher tolerance for uncertainty and work intensity. The research is not that entrepreneurship damages all relationships equally — it is that the damage is systematic and predictable, and the moderating variable is often invisible until the strain has already accumulated.

If the patterns described here are recognisable in your own relationship — or if a partner has raised concerns that you have attributed primarily to the business situation — that is worth taking seriously as a relational problem rather than a temporary phase. A couples therapist or psychologist with experience in occupational stress can look at the specific dynamics in your relationship in ways that general research cannot.

Why friendships disappear without a single decision being made

The friendship attrition that accompanies founding is less documented than the partner wellbeing research but is explained cleanly by Hobfoll’s conservation of resources framework. Under resource depletion, people prioritise their highest-stakes relationships — partner, family — and allow lower-stakes relationships to atrophy through inattention. The entrepreneur working 70-hour weeks does not decide to let friendships fade. The friendships simply fail to receive the minimum investment required for maintenance, and gradually dissolve.

The compounding consequence is the one rarely discussed. The social landscape the entrepreneur re-enters when the business stabilises is materially different from the one they left. The relationships that required ongoing investment have not been maintained. The people have moved on, formed other primary relationships, and cannot simply re-absorb a returning friend as if no time has passed.

This connects to the entrepreneurial loneliness research covered earlier in this series. The friendship attrition is both a cause and a consequence of isolation. Friends who were not present during the founding years are less able to understand the founder’s experience when it is over. The social network that re-emerges is smaller and different in character.

The opportunity cost here is specifically non-recoverable. The years of a friendship, once foregone, are not available in the same form later. The research on what close relationships do for long-term health — Robert Waldinger’s Harvard Study of Adult Development, tracking 700 men across 80 years — found that relationship quality in the thirties is one of the strongest predictors of physical health in the eighties. The relational investment decisions made during a founding period have a longer arc than the business itself.

A book worth reading alongside this

The Good Life by Robert Waldinger and Marc Schulz is the most directly relevant starting point. Waldinger directs the longest-running study of human flourishing in existence, and the book translates 80 years of longitudinal data into a readable account of what actually determines health and happiness across a life. His finding that close relationship quality is the most powerful predictor of later wellbeing — more than wealth, fame, or professional achievement — is the most important empirical counterweight to the trade-offs that founding asks people to make without naming them.

This article discusses psychological and relational patterns documented in research on entrepreneurial stress and relationship wellbeing. It is not designed to identify, diagnose, or assess any psychological condition, and it is not a substitute for professional support. If the patterns described here are significantly affecting your relationships or wellbeing, speaking with a psychologist or couples therapist can provide personalised guidance that an article cannot.

This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional psychological advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing significant psychological distress, please consult a qualified mental health professional.

Sources: 30-year British longitudinal study (2026), Journal of Behavioural and Experimental Economics, N=628 couples. Bakker, A.B. & Demerouti, E. (2013), spillover-crossover model. Westman, M. & Etzion, D. (1995), Journal of Organizational Behavior, 16(2). Hobfoll, S.E. (1989), American Psychologist, 44(3). Danish prescription data study, cited in The Conversation (2026).