25 Relationship Goals Every Couple Should Set (and Actually Enjoy Together)

The experiences shared in this article are based on real emotional journeys, but all personal details are anonymized and used with the explicit written permission of the clients. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. We are committed to treating all client stories with the utmost confidentiality and respect.

Letโ€™s be realโ€”relationships arenโ€™t Disney movies. Theyโ€™re more like a Netflix series where the WiFi keeps buffering: moments of magic interrupted by โ€˜Wait, did you pay the electric bill?โ€™ fatigue.

But what if you could write better scripts together?

Not through candlelit vows, but with pizza grease on your fingers and inside jokes about that time you both got food poisoning from a gas station sushi dare?

These 25 goals arenโ€™t about being perfect partners.

Theyโ€™re about becoming co-authors of a story that actually feels like yours.

Save this article for laterโ€”Pin it to Pinterest and come back when you need it! ๐Ÿ“Œ

relationship goals

1. Create a “No Judgment” Pizza Night

Picture this: Itโ€™s Friday evening, and the rain taps softly against your apartment window.

Youโ€™re splitting a pepperoni pizza with your partner, but instead of scrolling through Netflix, youโ€™re talking about the one thing youโ€™ve both been avoidingโ€”the tension around his upcoming job relocation.

Why it works: Food disarms us. One couple I coached used their weekly pizza ritual to finally discuss mismatched libidosโ€”they laughed through the awkwardness while sharing garlic knots.

Try this:

  • Order the same comfort food every week (no healthy substitutions!).
  • Start with light topics (โ€œRemember our disastrous camping trip?โ€), then gently dive into heavier ones.
  • Rule: No interrupting, no โ€œYou shouldโ€™veโ€ฆโ€ statements.

2. Master the Art of the 10-Minute Check-In

No, this isnโ€™t a corporate meeting.

Think of it as a daily emotional temperature reading.

Last winter, a client nearly called off her wedding because she and her fiancรฉ stopped asking, โ€œHowโ€™s your heart today?โ€

Try this:
While brewing coffee or walking the dog, take turns sharing:

  1. One specific thing you appreciated about each other that day (โ€œThanks for texting me that meme during my meetingโ€”it made me snort-laughโ€).
  2. One tiny frustration (โ€œI felt lonely when you joked about my burnt casseroleโ€).

Key: Keep it brief and solution-focused. No monologues.


3. Build a “Fight Kit” (Yes, Really)

Every couple arguesโ€”but thriving pairs argue better.

During my early dating years, I kept a literal toolbox under the bed containing:

  • A list of banned phrases (โ€œYou alwaysโ€ฆโ€).
  • A stress ball shaped like a disgruntled avocado.
  • Printed conflict resolution steps from my coach training.

Your version:

  • Agree on 3 โ€œcool downโ€ strategies (e.g., 20-minute breathers, code words like โ€œpineappleโ€ to pause heated moments).
  • Practice during minor spats (debating holiday plans) before big fights hit.

4. Plan a “Secret Adventure” Every Season

Surprise doesnโ€™t require grand gestures.

Last fall, a clientโ€™s boyfriend secretly learned her favorite โ€™90s pop lyrics and staged a car karaoke marathon during their Upstate New York road trip.

Ideas:

  • Spring: Blindfolded picnic where you take turns feeding each other mystery snacks.
  • Summer: Midnight stargazing with a constellation app and thermos of spiked lemonade.
  • Fall: DIY haunted house tourโ€”bonus points for dressing the dog as a ghost.
  • Winter: โ€œUgly sweaterโ€ bar crawlโ€ฆ but you have to switch sweaters halfway.

5. Learn Each Otherโ€™s Love Languageโ€ฆ Then Hack It

Gary Chapmanโ€™s classic concept gets real when you personalize it.

My college boyfriend once deep-cleaned my moldy shower (his nightmare chore) because he knew I felt loved through Acts of Service.

Try this:

  • If their language is Words of Affirmation, leave Post-its in their gym bag (โ€œYour squat form is chefโ€™s kissโ€).
  • Physical Touch? Invent a signature hug that lasts 8 seconds (science says it releases oxytocin).
  • Twist: Occasionally speak a different languageโ€”it keeps things surprising.

6. Start a โ€œWeird Winsโ€ Jar

We celebrate promotions and anniversaries, but what about the messy victories?

A couple I know saved their marriage by applauding moments like โ€œDidnโ€™t snap when you forgot the dry cleaningโ€ฆ for the third time.โ€

How to begin:

  • Decorate a mason jar with inside jokes.
  • Write wins on scrap paper during Sunday breakfast.
  • Read them aloud on New Yearโ€™s Eve with champagne.

7. Take a โ€œRelationship Detoxโ€ Weekend

Imagine unsubscribing from emotional clutter.

Last summer, a client and her husband spent 48 hours in a Colorado cabin with:

  • No phones
  • No โ€œadultingโ€ talk (bills, chores, or in-laws)
  • Just hiking, bad horror movies, and pancake art battles

Your detox rules:

  • Ban one resentment-trigger (e.g., work emails).
  • Add one playful activity (e.g., teaching each other TikTok dances).

8. Design a โ€œRelationship Playlistโ€

Music anchors memories.

A grieving client rebuilt intimacy with her husband by recreating the playlist from their Paris honeymoonโ€”they slow-danced in their kitchen every Friday.

Build yours:

  • 5 songs from your early dating days.
  • 3 songs for making up after fights.
  • 1 embarrassing bop youโ€™d never admit to loving (cough Nickelback).

9. Practice โ€œReverse Engineeringโ€ Fights

Hereโ€™s a trick from my coach toolkit: After any argument, ask:

  1. โ€œWhat did I really need in that moment?โ€ (Hint: Itโ€™s rarely about the dishes.)
  2. โ€œHow could Iโ€™ve asked for it without blame?โ€

Example: Instead of โ€œYou never listen!โ€ try โ€œI need 5 minutes to vent without solutionsโ€”is that okay?โ€


10. Host a โ€œNostalgia Nightโ€

Revisiting your past can reignite sparks.

One couple I know recreated their first date (down to the questionable cologne) and realized theyโ€™d stopped laughing at each otherโ€™s puns.

Theme ideas:

  • Watch your first movie together (popcorn mandatory).
  • Wear the outfit you wore on your first kiss date.
  • Re-enact your most cringe-worthy fightโ€ฆ but with sarcastic commentary.

11. Swap โ€œComplaintโ€ for โ€œCuriosityโ€

Instead of โ€œWhy are you late AGAIN?โ€ try โ€œWas your day as chaotic as my imagination thinks?โ€

This small shift disarms defensiveness.

Science-backed tip: Start sentences with โ€œIโ€™m curiousโ€ฆโ€ instead of โ€œYou shouldโ€ฆโ€


12. Create a โ€œGuilty Pleasureโ€ Ritual

Let yourselves be uncool together.

Lily and her boyfriend have a sacred Tuesday tradition: eating gas station taquitos while watching The Bachelor and ruthfully mocking the editing.

Try:

  • Reality TV marathons with drinking games.
  • Reading trashy romance novels aloud in fake British accents.

13. Map Your โ€œEmotional Emergency Contactsโ€

Not every problem needs coupleโ€™s therapy.

Identify 3 go-to people/resources:

  1. The friend who gives tough love (โ€œYโ€™all need to get over yourselvesโ€).
  2. The chill cousin who sends cat memes mid-crisis.
  3. A shared therapist/coach (like yours truly) for recurring issues.

14. Master the โ€œRoad Trip Resetโ€

Thereโ€™s magic in being stuck in a car.

A client saved her engagement by driving to Joshua Tree with two rules:

  • No discussing wedding plans.
  • Stop at every roadside attraction.

Your route: Pick a destination under 3 hours away. Assign roles:

  • DJ
  • Snack master
  • GPS (but wrong turns are encouraged)

15. Write โ€œFuture Usโ€ Letters

Seal them in an envelope to open on your next anniversary.

A couple I coached wrote:

  • โ€œI hope weโ€™re still having pancake fights.โ€
  • โ€œPlease tell me we finally got the dog.โ€
  • โ€œIf weโ€™re stuck in a rut, letโ€™s book a flight to Reykjavik.โ€

16. Learn a New Skillโ€ฆ Badly Together

Competence kills fun.

Take a pottery class and deliberately make lopsided mugs.

Film each other attempting salsa basics.

The goal is to laugh, not impress.


17. Schedule โ€œParallel Playโ€ Time

You donโ€™t have to merge hobbies.

My parentsโ€™ 40-year secret? Every Saturday, Mom paints watercolors while Dad builds model planesโ€”they share silence and occasional grunts of approval.


18. Adopt a โ€œThird Thingโ€

Psychologists say sharing care for something outside the relationship (a pet, plant, or community project) reduces codependency.

Pro tip: Start with a low-stakes โ€œthingโ€โ€”like a succulent named Gary.


19. Develop a โ€œSafe Wordโ€ for Vulnerability

Sometimes we need permission to be tender.

One client couple uses โ€œTaco Tuesdayโ€ to signal: โ€œIโ€™m about to share something scaryโ€”handle with care.โ€


20. Take โ€œSecret Santaโ€ Energy Year-Round

Gift-giving isnโ€™t just for holidays.

Leave surprise notes, $5 coffee shop gift cards, or their favorite protein bar in unexpected places.


21. Audit Your โ€œRelationship Narrativesโ€

We all have stories (โ€œWeโ€™re bad at communicationโ€).

Challenge them: โ€œWhen have we actually resolved something well?โ€

Write down 3 examples.


22. Practice โ€œMicro-Cheatingโ€โ€ฆ On Social Media

Flirt with each other online. Comment inside jokes under their Instagram posts.

Text them memes only you two understand during meetings.


23. Host a โ€œMidnight Confessionalโ€

Thereโ€™s something about 2 AM truths.

One couple revives intimacy by sitting on their fire escape with cheap wine, answering questions like: โ€œWhatโ€™s something youโ€™re secretly proud of?โ€


24. Redefine โ€œAlone Timeโ€

Solitude isnโ€™t rejection. Try:

  • Reading in the same room without talking.
  • Taking separate walks, then sharing one โ€œweird thing I saw.โ€

25. Normalize โ€œRelationship Renovationโ€ Phases

Even strong couples hit walls.

Last year, Mia took a 3-week solo trip to New Mexico after realizing she had lost herself in her partnerโ€™s needs.

They came back fresher, not fractured.


Final Words from The Darling Code

If youโ€™re overwhelmed, start here:

  1. Pick ONE goal that makes you smile just thinking about it.
  2. Schedule it like a doctorโ€™s appointment (seriouslyโ€”Google Calendar it).
  3. Debrief after (โ€œWhat felt awkward? What surprised us?โ€).

Relationships arenโ€™t about perfectionโ€”theyโ€™re about showing up, messily and magnificently, again and again.

With heart,
The Darling Code

P.S. Save this to your Pinterest โ€œRelationship Goalsโ€ board. Then text your partner: โ€œFound something fun for us to try. Pizza night brainstorm?โ€

Got value from this article? Pin it to Pinterest for easy reference and help others discover it! ๐ŸŒŸ

relationship goals
Vivienne

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Vivienne, Relationship Coach & Self Love Coach

Vivienne is a Relationship Coach and Self-Love Coach who believes the key to great relationships starts with YOU. She helps individuals and couples build confidence, set healthy boundaries, and create connections that truly honor who they are.

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