Young happy couple having fun while doing cleaning kitchen.

(Credit: jittawit21/Shutterstock)

NEW YORK — Looking for an easy and inexpensive way to freshen up your relationship? Consider making “acts of service” your new love language in 2024!

A new survey of 2,000 adults, half of whom are in a relationship, discovered that 69% of Americans say the simple act of seeing their partner clean is a turn-on. The data also shows that when it comes to relationships, it’s the little things that count the most.

Gen Z and millennials would rather receive “the gift” of a clean house (17%) than an expensive gift (11%). Who needs flowers when mopping the floor may do just the trick, right guys? In fact, twice the number of women find the smell of a clean home appealing than those who prefer the smell of fresh flowers.

Conducted by Talker Research for Swiffer Unstopables, the survey found that 67% believe a clean, fresh-smelling home would make them more likely to “get fresh” with a partner. This is likely why 82% of survey-takers said they are likely to put extra effort into cleaning before bringing home a date.

Positive cleaning habits can even have long-term impacts on your relationship. The survey found that one in three people in a relationship who have similar cleaning habits to their partner have been together for at least five years.

Six in 10 people in a relationship say they equally share household cleaning duties, crediting their significant other for helping them with laundry (51%), doing dishes (50%), and sweeping (46%). However, women are more likely to feel that daily cleaning duties are not equally shared (39% vs. 27%).

Couple arguing over cleaning chores
39% of women are more likely to feel that daily cleaning duties are not equally shared, compared to 27% of men in a relationship. (© inesbazdar - stock.adobe.com)

While it’s clear the simple act of cleaning can go a long way in making your partner happy, poor cleaning habits can have the opposite effect. Two-thirds of respondents said an unclean-smelling home would be an instant deal breaker in a relationship (68%). Further, 43% would leave a date’s home if it didn’t smell fresh, and more than a third would even end a relationship if their partner’s home wasn’t clean.

If you’re looking to settle down, make sure you’re doing your fair share! Sixty-five percent of those surveyed said they’re less likely to move in with a partner who has poor cleaning habits. If that doesn’t convince you to grab a mop, the survey also found that those who clean for at least half an hour each day are likely to “get fresh” twice as often as those who clean once a month or less often.

Even if you’re not dating or in a relationship, a clean space matters. When entering someone’s place for the first time, first impressions are important, and those surveyed know it, which is why the majority look out for a tidy (59%) and clean-smelling home (54%). Some Americans even prefer these qualities over good decor (18%) or a large space (7%).

How clean your home is can even change how people see you. Nearly eight in 10 Americans see homes as a reflection of their owner, saying the cleanliness of someone’s home affects how they view them as a person (79%).

Survey methodology:

This random double-opt-in survey of 2,000 adults who are single or in a relationship evenly split by race was commissioned by Swiffer between June 7 and June 10, 2024. It was conducted by market research company Talker Research, whose team members are members of the Market Research Society (MRS) and the European Society for Opinion and Marketing Research (ESOMAR).

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