Marriage Pact
The Marriage Pact is an annual matchmaking initiative that operates on 109 American college campuses, pairing participants through a research-backed algorithm based on a detailed questionnaire assessing values, communication styles, and personal preferences to identify highly compatible "backup" partners for potential long-term relationships.[1][2] Originating in 2017 at Stanford University as a final project in an economics class led by students Liam McGregor and Sophia Sterling-Angus, the program began as an experiment applying market-matching principles to romantic compatibility among undergraduates.[3][4] It quickly expanded beyond Stanford, reaching 65 campuses within its first 13 months and growing to 109 schools as of 2025, with 628,977 students having participated nationwide as of November 2025.[5][1][6] The initiative draws inspiration from the cinematic trope of friends agreeing to marry if single by a certain age, but emphasizes data-driven connections over casual dating apps by focusing on psychological and ethical alignments rather than physical attributes.[2][7] Participants complete a 50-question survey covering topics such as political views, humor preferences, and life priorities— for example, statements like "I prefer politically incorrect humor" or attitudes toward family and career— which informs an algorithm to generate one exclusive match per person, complete with a compatibility percentage score ranging from 0 to 100.[2][7] Matches are limited to students on the same campus to encourage in-person meetings, and recipients receive an email with their partner's contact information, fostering direct outreach.[1] The program operates seasonally, typically in the fall, with high engagement rates; for instance, about 60% of Stanford students joined in the first week of its inaugural run.[2] While many students participate for fun or curiosity, the Marriage Pact has facilitated lasting connections, with approximately 30% of matches meeting in person and about 1 in 9 of those developing into relationships lasting a year or longer, equating to 3-4% overall success in long-term dating.[2][5] Notable outcomes include several engagements and marriages, such as that of Max Walker and Melia Summers, who matched at 99.65% compatibility in 2020 and wed in 2024 after bonding over shared values revealed by the survey.[2] Run by a small team of mostly student founders, the initiative continues to prioritize meaningful relationships amid modern dating challenges, positioning itself at the intersection of behavioral economics, psychology, and technology.[5][3]Concept and Inspiration
General Idea of Marriage Pacts
A marriage pact refers to an informal, often humorous agreement between two friends or acquaintances of the opposite sex to marry each other if both remain single by a specified age, typically in their late 20s or 30s, serving as a contingency against prolonged singledom.[8] This trope positions the pact as a platonic safety net, transforming potential romantic partners into reliable backups amid dating uncertainties.[9] Real-life instances, such as those shared in personal accounts, illustrate how these pacts emerge from shared vulnerabilities, with participants citing them as lighthearted yet poignant responses to romantic setbacks.[10] The concept appears in literature and media as a safeguard against isolation, blending companionship with emotional security without formal obligations.[8] Culturally, marriage pacts hold significance in mitigating fears of lifelong singledom, embodying a form of contingency planning rooted in attachment theory, which posits that individuals form relational strategies to regulate anxiety and seek secure bonds against perceived threats of solitude.[11] Psychological insights highlight how these pacts function as emotional buffers, allowing participants to outsource relational security to trusted others while navigating modern dating landscapes marked by instability.[11] By addressing the stigma and isolation associated with being unattached, they reflect broader societal tensions around partnership as a marker of fulfillment.[12] Over time, the marriage pact trope has transitioned from casual personal anecdotes—often sparked in conversations among young adults—to more structured activities that systematize the backup concept.Academic and Cultural Roots
The academic foundations of formalized marriage pacts trace back to the stable marriage problem in economics and game theory, first rigorously analyzed in a 1962 paper by mathematicians David Gale and Lloyd Shapley. The problem models a scenario involving two equal-sized groups—such as men and women—each ranking preferences for potential partners from the other group, represented as a bipartite graph where one side acts as proposers and the other as acceptors. Gale and Shapley proved that a stable matching always exists in this setup: a pairing where no two individuals from opposite groups would both prefer each other over their assigned partners, ensuring no incentive for deviation or "instability." Their deferred acceptance algorithm achieves this by having proposers offer to their most preferred acceptor, who tentatively accepts the best offer received so far and rejects others; rejected proposers then propose to their next preference, with acceptors able to upgrade or downgrade based on incoming proposals until no further changes occur, guaranteeing termination in a stable outcome.[13][14] This work earned Shapley (with economist Alvin E. Roth) the 2012 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for contributions to the theory of stable allocations and matching markets, recognizing Gale and Shapley's foundational theorem posthumously for Gale, who died in 2008. Beyond theoretical interest, the Gale-Shapley framework has influenced practical applications, including centralized school choice mechanisms in cities like New York, where students are matched to schools based on preferences to minimize justified envy, and kidney exchange programs that pair donors with recipients through compatible cycles, increasing transplant rates by resolving incompatibilities.[15][13] Cultural depictions of backup marriage pacts have popularized the concept in media, often portraying them as lighthearted agreements among friends to wed if unattached by a certain age, serving as a humorous safeguard against lifelong singledom. In the 1997 film My Best Friend's Wedding, protagonists Julianne and Michael share such a pact to marry if both remain single by age 28, which Julianne invokes upon learning of his engagement, highlighting tensions between friendship and romance. Similarly, in the TV series How I Met Your Mother (Season 4, Episode 17, 2009), characters Ted and Robin agree to become each other's "backup spouse" if neither is married by 40, framing the pact as a playful yet poignant contingency amid evolving relationships.[16][17][10] Early academic discussions in social psychology during the 1990s further underscored the appeal of compatibility matching by emphasizing value-based pairing over superficial traits like physical attractiveness for enduring relationships. Research highlighted that shared attitudes, beliefs, and personality characteristics foster greater relational satisfaction and stability, as couples with aligned core values experience higher intimacy and lower conflict compared to those matched primarily on appearance. For instance, a 1998 study using a couple-centered approach found significant similarity in personality traits among established partners, suggesting that value congruence plays a pivotal role in partner selection and long-term bonding beyond initial physical appeal. Berscheid and Reis's 1998 review of attraction literature reinforced this, noting that while physical traits drive short-term interest, similarity in values and lifestyles predicts sustained romantic compatibility.[18][19]Founding and Development
Origins at Stanford
The Marriage Pact was created in fall 2017 by Stanford University economics undergraduates Liam McGregor and Sophia Sterling-Angus as a final project for their Economics 136 course on market design.[20] Motivated by the challenge of applying economic principles of stable matching to real-world dating and compatibility, the founders sought to design a system that could pair individuals based on long-term relational potential rather than superficial attractions.[20][21] Launched in November 2017, the initiative rapidly spread across campus through flyers and social promotion, attracting over 3,400 participants—58% of Stanford's undergraduate body—within the first four days.[20][21] As a free, anonymous online platform, it collected responses via a digital questionnaire and generated matches presented as "future spouse" pairs, complete with compatibility scores derived from the respondents' stated values and preferences.[20] The matching process drew on the Gale-Shapley algorithm, a Nobel Prize-winning method for stable pairings, adapted to prioritize mutual compatibility in a non-binding social experiment.[20] This initial iteration highlighted the project's appeal, with Sterling-Angus noting a personal goal of attending numerous weddings as a lighthearted extension of the academic endeavor.[20]Expansion to Other Campuses
Following the success of its initial 2017 launch at Stanford University, where over half of undergraduates participated, the Marriage Pact became an annual campus event. Expansion to other campuses began in fall 2020, leveraging student-led initiatives to adapt the concept locally.[22] By 2021, it had reached about 50 colleges across the United States, with rapid growth accelerating during the COVID-19 pandemic as universities sought engaging virtual activities for isolated students.[4] This period marked key pilots at institutions like Vanderbilt, where over 4,000 students joined in a six-day online event, and Tufts, which saw more than 3,000 participants in November 2020 to foster campus connections amid remote learning.[4] The expansion continued, surpassing 60 campuses by early 2022 and approaching 90 by 2024, before reaching 109 schools by 2025.[3][2][1] The growth was driven primarily by word-of-mouth among students, amplified by social media platforms such as TikTok, where viral posts garnered tens of thousands of engagements and encouraged peer participation.[4][3] Partnerships with student organizations played a crucial role, as campus chapters coordinated annual events tailored to local demographics, often integrating the questionnaire into orientation or social programming.[4] During the pandemic, adaptations to fully virtual formats proved effective, with colleges like Vanderbilt and Tufts providing institutional support to promote the activity as a morale booster, enabling seamless nationwide scaling without physical gatherings.[4] Organizationally, the Marriage Pact evolved from a student academic project into a dedicated company, with founders Liam McGregor and Sophia Sterling-Angus transitioning to full-time roles to manage the expanding operations.[3] Funding shifted from grassroots efforts to formal investment, including a $5 million seed round in September 2022 led by Bain Capital Ventures, which supported infrastructure development and broader outreach.[23] While some campuses contribute through activity fees, the central hub remains the website marriagepact.com, which hosts the questionnaire and facilitates campus-specific matches.[23][24] A 2024 feature in the Associated Press highlighted the project's cultural footprint, drawing attention to its role in campus life and spurring further interest among additional schools.[2] By 2025, sustained annual events were evident in reports from campuses such as the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, with 4,767 participants; Villanova University, exceeding 2,500 entries; and Colorado College, achieving 56% student involvement.[25][26][27]Operations and Methodology
Questionnaire and Participation
The Marriage Pact operates as an annual event on participating college campuses, typically held in the fall or spring semester depending on the school. Students sign up for free through the official website by entering their campus-specific email address for verification, then complete the questionnaire to receive a match. Participation is time-limited, often with a one-week window once the survey launches for that campus, and the entire process takes approximately 10-15 minutes.[28][2] The questionnaire consists of 50 multiple-choice questions designed to assess core values, beliefs, and preferences relevant to long-term compatibility. These include topics such as communication styles, conflict resolution, family priorities (e.g., comfort with a child being gay), political leanings, and views on lifestyle choices like non-monogamy or drug use. Participants respond on a 1-7 scale indicating agreement levels or preferences, from deal-breakers to non-negotiables, while avoiding superficial elements like physical appearance or income. Demographic questions, such as gender identity, religious affiliation, school year, and languages spoken, are also collected to inform the matching process alongside the values-based responses.[21][2][28] The event emphasizes inclusivity, welcoming participants of all genders and sexual orientations without restrictions, and focuses on value alignment rather than traditional dating criteria. Upon receiving a match via email—complete with the partner's name, contact information, and compatibility percentage—participants have the option to initiate contact, such as messaging or arranging a meetup, though these steps are entirely voluntary and not required.[2][28][21] Questionnaires feature campus-specific customizations, such as additional questions tailored to local traditions or priorities—for instance, politics at Georgetown or career ambitions at Stanford—to enhance relevance. As of 2025, the platform includes enhanced privacy notices outlining data collection (contact, demographics, and values responses), usage solely for matching and anonymized research, encryption protocols, and user controls for data deletion or updates.[2][21][29]Matching Algorithm
The Marriage Pact's matching algorithm was initially inspired by the Gale-Shapley stable matching framework from economic theory but has since become proprietary, with details not publicly disclosed. It generates compatibility scores by analyzing alignments in participants' responses to survey questions on values, preferences, and non-negotiables, using a model that quantifies similarity across key dimensions such as lifestyle and beliefs. These scores reflect relative compatibility, expressed as a percentile (e.g., 80% means the match outperforms 80% of other possible pairings on campus), rather than an absolute measure. The process draws on research-backed metrics for romantic compatibility, prioritizing value congruence over superficial traits.[30][6] The algorithm executes centrally after the campus survey closes, processing responses from potentially thousands of participants to generate one-to-one matches, each labeled as a "safety spouse" with the associated compatibility percentile. No alternative matches or group pairings are disclosed to participants, emphasizing a singular, optimized backup option. This design accommodates imbalances in participant numbers by prioritizing overall stability, and it scales efficiently for large cohorts, such as over 5,000 users per campus.[30][25] The platform supports inclusivity for LGBTQ+ participants through flexible options for gender identity and sexual orientation, allowing same-gender and non-binary pairings without assuming heterosexual norms.[28][31]Impact and Participation
Campus Involvement and Statistics
Since its inception in 2017, the Marriage Pact has accumulated over 628,977 participants across 109 U.S. college campuses.[24] On average, campuses see 40-60% undergraduate involvement, with rates varying based on promotion efforts and campus culture.[32][27][33] In 2025, highlights included 4,767 submissions at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, over 2,500 at Villanova University, and 3,853 at Northwestern University.[25][26][34] Demographic data from recent campus reports shows a typical gender breakdown of 55-60% female and 40-41% male participants, alongside 3% identifying as non-binary, indicating modest growth in non-binary engagement over the past few years.[32] Gender imbalances often occur, with more women participating than men on many campuses, sometimes prompting extended survey deadlines to balance matches.[29][26] Participation trends reveal a surge during the 2020-2021 COVID-19 pandemic, driven by student isolation and a desire for virtual social connections, which led numerous campuses to adopt the event for the first time.[4][35] Annual campus-specific reports, such as Colorado College's 2025 edition documenting a 56% participation rate, highlight ongoing variations by institution.[27] Geographically, the program remains concentrated on the U.S. East and West Coasts but has expanded into the Midwest, with active chapters at schools like Grinnell College in Iowa.[36][1] Factors boosting involvement include targeted campus promotions by student representatives, peer-driven social media buzz, and the activity's lighthearted novelty as a low-stakes social experiment.[29][25] Year-over-year comparisons demonstrate growth; for instance, Stanford's inaugural 2017 iteration drew approximately 58% of undergraduates (over 4,000 participants), rising to over 70% in subsequent years like 2023 with 6,082 submissions.[29][37]| Campus | Year | Participants | % of Undergrads | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UNC Chapel Hill | 2025 | 4,767 | ~24% | [25] |
| Villanova | 2025 | 2,500+ | N/A | [26] |
| Colorado College | 2025 | ~56% of population | 56% | [27] |
| Williams College | 2025 | 1,360 | ~60% | [32] |
| Stanford | 2017 (initial) | 4,000+ | ~58% | [29] |