Second time round, bride is younger

Actor Johnny Depp, then 50, split from the mother of his two children Vanessa Paradis in 2012. He had met new girlfriend Amber Heard, then 27, when filming The Rum Diaries in 2010 and they are now engaged.

Actor Johnny Depp, then 50, split from the mother of his two children Vanessa Paradis in 2012. He had met new girlfriend Amber Heard, then 27, when filming The Rum Diaries in 2010 and they are now engaged.

Published Dec 11, 2014

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Washington - One in five men who remarry wed a woman at least 10 years their junior, according to a Pew Research Centre analysis of Census data. By contrast, only one in 20 men on their first marriage pair up with someone that young.

“There's a common stereotype that American men who remarry are especially likely to walk down the aisle with a younger woman,” Pew's Gretchen Livingston writes. She rates that stereotype “largely true.”

While 80 percent of men in their first marriages have spouses within five years of their age, that share drops to 57 percent by the second marriage. Men are no more or less likely to marry older women between their first and second marriages, Pew finds.

For women, the numbers are essentially the reverse, although the changes between the first and second marriages aren't as dramatic. Seven percent of women have spouses more than 10 years their senior in their first marriages, a share that nearly doubles to 13 percent by the second marriage.

Interestingly, though, women are also more likely to marry younger men on their second trip to the altar. Only three percent of women in their first marriages walk down the aisle with men more than five years younger than them. By the second marriage, that share rises to 11 percent.

Overall, Pew finds that four in 10 new marriages are remarriages for at least one spouse. In the 1960s, only 13 percent of married adults were on their second marriage. In 2013, that number stood at 23 percent.

And it's not just second marriages - third and fourth marriages are becoming more common too.

 

A study of Facebook users earlier this year found that internationally, the average age gap between people in relationships was 2.4 years. In the US, the average age gap between spouses increased as the couples got older, echoing Pew's findings.

Washington Post

* Ingraham writes about politics, drug policy and all things data. He previously worked at the Brookings Institution and the Pew Research Centre.

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