When it comes to green flags in dating, “ambition” almost always ranks near the top. For many of us, that word conjures a specific archetype—someone with a good career, a six-figure salary, and a LinkedIn profile that reads like a highlight reel of promotions.
Ambition, drive, success—these are all valuable traits in partners and in ourselves. However, the issue is that these attributes have been flattened into something far more superficial and inaccurate, relationship experts warn. “We’ve turned ambition into shorthand for, ‘Does this person make enough money?’” Keisha Saunders-Waldron, LCMHCS, an Ohio-based therapist specializing in relationship dynamics, tells SELF. “When it’s really about whether you’re growing and living intentionally…or just drifting through life on autopilot.”
In her 20 years of practice, Saunders-Waldron says she’s seen this misconception sabotage relationships. “I’ve worked with so many couples where one person is ‘ambitious’ on paper but completely checked out and lazy at home,” she says. “I’ve also seen the reverse—rejecting partners who aren’t corporate climbers but deeply determined about raising kids thoughtfully, building community, learning new skills”—versions that matter far more than pay bumps and university degrees.
So what does a lack of ambition look like? Here are the biggest red flags to watch out for.
1. They show little interest in growing as a person.
“Ambition is about growth, not just achievement,” Saunders-Waldron says—meaning, it’s less about what they’ve already accomplished and more about whether they’re pushing themselves to be better.
Maybe they started going to therapy consistently after a difficult breakup in the past, or taught themselves how to cook (even if their chicken piccata still needs improvement…and more seasoning). According to Saunders-Waldron, “a person who’s invested in their own progress—even if it has nothing to do with their career—is going to be a much better partner than someone chasing promotions who hasn’t done any emotional work in their adult life.”
2. They talk about change but don’t act on it.
Anyone can want to switch jobs, move to a new city, or run a marathon. But ambition is what bridges the gap between intention and action.
That explains why those who lack it stay stuck in chronic passivity. “It’s the mindset of, ‘Oh, I’ll get to it.’ ‘I’ll work on it,’” Ciara Bogdanovic, LMFT, founder of Sagebrush Psychotherapy in Los Angeles, tells SELF. “They’re waiting for things to happen to them instead of taking the initiative themselves.” So they want to save money…but won’t adjust their spending budget. They hope to be healthier…yet refuse to cook at home or go for walks outside. Essentially, “there’s no action,” Bogdanovic says. “No follow-through.”
