Parenting does not come with an expiration date, but it does come with an evolution. Once a child reaches adulthood, the rules of engagement shift in ways that many parents are simply not prepared for. The boundaries change. The dynamic changes. And one of the areas where that transition tends to get most complicated is when an adult child brings a partner into the picture.
Unlike the casual high school relationships parents once navigated with relative ease, a serious adult partnership carries real weight. What a parent says about that person, even in passing, can echo far longer than intended. According to relationship psychology, certain phrases carry a particular kind of damage because they do not just criticize the partner. They signal something deeper to the adult child about how their choices, judgment and autonomy are being perceived.
Here are nine phrases that experts recommend parents avoid and a look at why each one lands harder than it might seem.
1. “I just don’t like them”
Blunt honesty has its place, but this phrase is rarely helpful in this context. Rather than opening a conversation, it tends to close one. It puts the adult child on the defensive immediately and creates what psychologists describe as a loyalty conflict, forcing them to choose sides before any real issue has even been raised.
2. “You can do better”
Parents often deliver this line thinking it reads as a compliment, a vote of confidence in their child’s worth. What the child actually hears is a verdict on their judgment. The implicit message is that they made a poor choice, which is criticism wrapped in flattery.
3. “They changed you”
Change is a natural part of any meaningful relationship. When a parent frames it as something done to their child rather than something their child is experiencing and choosing, it positions the partner as a corrupting influence and dismisses normal personal growth. Even when the observation feels accurate, voicing it this way rarely leads anywhere productive.
4. “You were happier before”
This phrase is almost always well-intentioned, but it places the parent in the role of authority over their child’s emotional life. It invites the adult child to second-guess their own feelings and experiences in ways that can quietly erode their confidence in the relationship, and in themselves.
5. “They are not right for our family”
Few phrases signal conditional love more clearly than this one. It creates an us-versus-them dynamic that puts the partner permanently outside the circle and tells the adult child that acceptance comes with terms. In practice, this approach tends to backfire. When a parent rejects a spouse or serious partner, the adult child typically moves closer to that person and further from the parent.
6. “When are you going to leave them?”
Outside of situations involving genuine safety concerns, this question crosses a clear boundary. It undermines the relationship, encourages secrecy and damages the trust that open communication between parent and adult child depends on. Even in cases where real concerns exist, the framing matters enormously.
7. “I saw this coming”
This is the relational equivalent of saying I told you so. It may feel satisfying to say in a moment of tension, but what the adult child needs in that moment is compassion, not confirmation that the parent had already made up their mind. The phrase communicates that being right mattered more than being supportive.
8. Comments about appearance, background or career
Snide remarks about where a partner comes from, what they do for work or how they look might feel minor in the moment. They are not. These types of comments create shame, reinforce a sense of hierarchy within the family and do lasting damage to how everyone interacts going forward. Respect, extended consistently, tends to be the investment with the highest return in these relationships.
9. “You always choose the wrong people”
This phrase moves beyond the partner and becomes an attack on the adult child’s identity and pattern of judgment. It breeds self-doubt and emotional distance, and it rarely motivates the kind of reflection the parent might be hoping for.
What parents can do instead
The long-term consequences of repeated criticism extend well beyond a single uncomfortable conversation. Over time, it can lead to fewer visits, less transparency and a gradual erosion of closeness that proves very difficult to reverse. When an adult child feels forced to choose between a parent and a partner, the partner typically wins.
If real concerns exist, the more effective approach starts with honest self-examination. Is the discomfort rooted in genuine worry about the child’s safety or wellbeing, or is it more about preference, unfamiliarity or a fear of losing closeness? That distinction matters.
From there, raising specific concerns privately, gently and without framing the partner as an adversary tends to land far better than broad disapproval. The goal is to keep the lines of communication open, not to win an argument. A parent who stays in the conversation, even an imperfect one, is far better positioned to offer real support when it is eventually needed.

