When your partner has an addiction, the person you chose to build your life with is still there — somewhere beneath the substance. But addiction changes people in ways that are devastating to live alongside. You’re grieving a relationship while it’s still happening. You’re trying to love someone who is simultaneously pushing you away. This guide is for you.
The Unique Challenges of a Partner’s Addiction
Loving an addicted spouse is different from loving an addicted child or parent. The intimacy is different. The financial entanglement is different. The physical and emotional availability — or lack of it — is different. And the question of when to stay and when to leave sits differently when you’re married or in a committed relationship.
- You share finances — addiction often creates significant financial damage
- You share a home — you cannot easily distance yourself from the chaos
- There may be children involved — their welfare adds another layer of complexity
- Intimacy has been damaged — trust, physical connection, emotional availability
- The question of leaving is more complicated — legally, financially, emotionally
What Actually Helps
Stop enabling — even when it feels cruel
Partners are often the primary enablers — covering financially, emotionally, practically. Stopping enabling doesn’t mean stopping loving. It means refusing to make the addiction comfortable. See our guide: Enabling vs. Helping →
Set clear, firm boundaries
In a partnership, boundaries are especially important and especially hard. “I will not stay in this marriage if you continue using without seeking help” is a legitimate boundary — if you mean it and will enforce it. Empty threats are worse than none. Read more: Setting Boundaries →
Protect your finances
Open a separate bank account. Know what assets you have. Understand your financial exposure. This is not preparing to leave — it is protecting yourself while you’re staying.
Get couples therapy
If your partner is willing, couples therapy with a specialist in addiction can be transformative — both for the relationship and for creating accountability around recovery. Online-Therapy.com offers couples therapy from $40/week.
Get individual support for yourself
Al-Anon and Nar-Anon have specific meetings for partners and spouses. Individual therapy helps you process the trauma of living alongside addiction and make clear-headed decisions about your future.
Codependent No More — Melody Beattie
Partners of addicts are particularly susceptible to codependency — organising your life around their addiction, losing your own identity, staying far beyond what is healthy. This book has helped millions of partners reclaim themselves.
The Question of Staying or Leaving
This is one of the most personal decisions you will ever face, and no guide can make it for you. What we can offer:
- If there is any physical danger — leave. Safety is non-negotiable.
- If there are children — their welfare must be primary. Growing up in active addiction causes lasting harm.
- If your partner is in active recovery and working at it — there may be a path forward together.
- If you have been waiting for years with no movement toward change — it is legitimate to ask whether waiting is still the right choice.
Work through this question with a therapist who specialises in addiction and relationships. Online-Therapy.com connects you with a specialist within 24 hours.
If Your Partner Agrees to Get Help
When a partner shows willingness — even briefly — move quickly. Have options ready. Offer to help with logistics. Express love and support for the decision. Don’t make it conditional on perfection — recovery is a process.
For celebrating recovery milestones together: Sobriety Gifts Guide →
Crisis Resources
Battling Drug Addiction:
A Complete Guide for Families
Understanding addiction, supporting recovery, setting boundaries, and crisis helplines — everything families need in one free guide.