# Moving beyond attraction, compassion, and competence: evidence for compatibility as a distinct component of mate preferences

**Authors:** Peter Karl Jonason, Evita March

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1725609 · 2026-02-02

## TL;DR

This study explores how compatibility, alongside traits like attractiveness and kindness, influences romantic partner preferences, especially in long-term relationships.

## Contribution

The study introduces compatibility as a distinct and significant factor in mate preferences, particularly in long-term contexts.

## Key findings

- Compatibility was more valued in long-term relationships, especially for women investing in parenting.
- Men who were less psychopathic preferred compatibility in short-term relationships.
- Physicality was strongly valued in short-term contexts for men.

## Abstract

Considerable research suggests there may be three primary qualities desired in romantic/sexual partners: physical attractiveness, interpersonal warmth, and social status. However, they might not capture the full range of needs served by what people seek in their partners; one omission may be compatibility.

In one volunteer (N = 339, 26% male, Aged = 18–70 years, M = 30.36 years) and one Prolific (N = 309, 51% male, Aged = 18–79 years, M = 26.74 years) dataset, we assessed the relative importance of physicality (e.g., height, attractiveness), compassion (e.g., kindness, generosity), competence (e.g., social status, intelligence), and compatibility (e.g., interpersonal coordination) in mate preferences as a function of sex differences, context effects, and people's pace of life, mating strategies, and social strategies.

We replicated several established effects like physicality was valued in men strongly in the short-term context, and that more psychopathic and narcissistic people chose physicality more often in their long-term mates. Uniquely here, compatibility was more valued in the long-term context especially for women extending more parenting effort when considering short-term relationships and men who were less psychopathic when considering short-term relationships.

Importantly, our research begins to carve out a unique space for considering compatibility as a further higher-order trait worthy of consideration in mating research.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** psychopathic (MESH:D000987)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12907189