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Lifestyle

Coming out about your sexuality vs staying closeted

Last reviewed 2026-04-27

Evidence quality 4.38/5

Eight-dimension review score against the quality rubric . Each dimension scored 1–5.

D1 Source verification
5/5
D2 Source authority & independence
5/5
D3 Regret-rate accuracy
2/5
D4 Source comparability
3/5
D5 Gilovich pattern
5/5
D6 Prose quality
5/5
D7 Caveat completeness
5/5
D8 Sample quality
5/5
Average 4.38/5
An open door with warm light on one side and a closed door in shadow on the other, separated by a thin vertical line.

Action regret

Coming out

7.0%

7% of LGBT adults say their sexual orientation is mainly something negative in their life (proxy)

US self-identified LGBT adults (predominantly out)

retrospective, no fixed timeframe

Inaction regret

Staying closeted

16%

16% past-year suicide attempt rate among LGBTQ youth who delayed coming out 2+ years (proxy)

LGBTQ+ young people ages 13–24 in the US who delayed disclosure

past year, cross-sectional

% who regret this choice

inaction dominates — Inaction dominates — most regret not acting.

Related decisions

Semantically similar decisions — same territory, different trade-offs.

lifestyle

Leave religion

% who regret this choice

Inaction dominates

Inaction regret 2.9× higher

lifestyle

Leave high-control group vs. stay

% who regret this choice

Inaction dominates

Inaction regret 2.6× higher

lifestyle

Leave hometown

% who regret this choice

Inaction dominates

Inaction regret 1.5× higher

lifestyle

Move abroad

% who regret this choice

Inaction dominates

Inaction regret 5.7× higher

lifestyle

Open vs monogamous

% who regret this choice

Inaction dominates

Inaction regret 1.4× higher

lifestyle

Keeping vs losing friendships

% who regret this choice

Inaction dominates

Inaction regret 5.9× higher

lifestyle

Confessing romantic interest

% who regret this choice

Inaction dominates

Inaction regret 1.8× higher

lifestyle

Embracing change

% who regret this choice

Inaction dominates

Inaction regret 3.3× higher

The Trevor Project’s 2022 national survey of approximately 34,000 LGBTQ young people found that those who delayed coming out by two or more years after first recognizing their identity reported a past-year suicide attempt rate of 16%, compared with 12% among those who came out within one year — the dominant inaction-side signal in this entry. A 2021 meta-analysis across 193 studies (n = 92,236) confirmed a small but consistent link between sexual orientation concealment and internalizing mental health problems (effect size r = 0.126).

On the action side, Pew Research Center’s 2013 survey of 1,197 self-identified LGBT adults found that 7% said their sexual orientation or gender identity was “mainly something negative” in their life. Since 86% of this sample had disclosed to at least one close friend and 54% said all or most important people in their life knew, the 7% figure approximates dissatisfaction among a predominantly out population. On outcomes: among those who told their mother, 14% reported the relationship grew weaker, 46% said it stayed the same, and 39% said it grew stronger.

The broad pattern aligns with Gilovich and Medvec’s prediction that inaction regret tends to dominate over time. For those who came out, only 7% view their orientation as a net negative, and 14% of disclosures to a mother produced relational damage. Staying closeted, by contrast, imposes a measurable psychological tax: the Pachankis and Bränström meta-analysis documents elevated depression and anxiety tied to concealment across decades of research, and the Trevor Project data show a 4-percentage- point gap in past-year suicide attempts between delayed and early disclosers. By 2024, Gallup found that 82% of LGBTQ adults had come out to at least one person, and the median coming-out age has been falling across generations (17 for those under 30 vs. 26 for those over 65), consistent with a population that increasingly treats disclosure as the preferred path.

Neither number is a true regret rate. The 7% captures those who view their openly lived orientation as net negative, not a direct question about whether coming out was a mistake. The 16% is a suicide attempt prevalence among youth who delayed disclosure — a severe mental health outcome, not a measure of whether closeted individuals wish they had come out. The two figures are drawn from different populations (US adults in an online panel; help-seeking youth ages 13-24 recruited via social media) and measure different constructs (life satisfaction vs. mental health crisis), so the delta is directional rather than precise. Survivorship bias is significant on the action side: people whose outcomes were so negative they declined to participate in an LGBT survey are missing from the Pew data. Cultural context varies enormously, and the cost- benefit calculus of disclosure shifts with geography, family religiosity, and the decade in question.

Sources: action

Claim ledger

Every number below is what each source reported, with the verbatim quote we relied on and how we arrived at our figure. Click any link to verify directly.

  1. [1] Pew Research Center — A Survey of LGBT Americans
    A Survey of LGBT Americans
    Statistic
    7% of LGBT adults say their sexual orientation or gender identity is mainly something negative in their life
    Excerpt
    “"About six-in-ten LGBT respondents (58%) say their sexual orientation or gender identity doesn't make much difference either way, while 34% say it is mainly something positive and just 7% say it is mainly something negative." ”
    Source data from
    2013-06-13
    Accessed
    2026-04-27
    Calculation
    Pew Research Center survey of 1,197 self-identified LGBT adults conducted April 11–29, 2013 (online). Since 86% of respondents had told at least one close friend and 54% said all or most important people in their life knew, this sample is predominantly out. The 7% who view their orientation as "mainly something negative" is the closest available proxy for action regret: it captures those whose lived experience of being openly LGBT is net negative. The remaining 93% see it as positive (34%) or neutral (58%).
  2. [2] Pew Research Center — Chapter 3: The Coming Out Experience
    Chapter 3: The Coming Out Experience
    Statistic
    14% of LGBT adults who told their mother about their sexual orientation say the relationship grew weaker
    Excerpt
    “"39% of LGBT adults who told their mother say their relationship has grown stronger, 46% say their relationship has not changed, and 14% say their relationship has grown weaker." ”
    Source data from
    2013-06-13
    Accessed
    2026-04-27
    Calculation
    Same Pew 2013 survey. Among those who disclosed to their mother, 14% reported the relationship grew weaker. This is a secondary action-side metric — relationship damage is the most commonly cited fear deterring disclosure — but it measures a specific outcome, not overall regret. The remaining 86% reported neutral (46%) or positive (39%) outcomes with their mother.

Sources: inaction

Claim ledger

Every number below is what each source reported, with the verbatim quote we relied on and how we arrived at our figure. Click any link to verify directly.

  1. [1] The Trevor Project — Age of Sexual Orientation Outness & Suicide Risk
    Age of Sexual Orientation Outness & Suicide Risk
    Statistic
    16% past-year suicide attempt rate among LGBTQ youth who came out 2+ years after first thinking they might be LGBTQ, vs 12% among those who came out within one year
    Excerpt
    “"LGBTQ youth who came out within a year of realizing they may be LGBTQ reported lower rates of attempting suicide in the past year (12%), compared to LGBTQ youth who came out two or more years after realizing they might be LGBTQ (16%)." ”
    Source data from
    2022-10-01
    Accessed
    2026-04-27
    Calculation
    The Trevor Project research brief, based on their 2022 National Survey of approximately 34,000 LGBTQ young people ages 13–24. The 16% is the actual prevalence of past-year suicide attempts among youth who delayed disclosure by two or more years, compared with 12% among those who came out within one year. The previously cited 56% figure was an adjusted odds ratio (aOR 1.56), which cannot be used as a prevalence rate. We use the 16% prevalence as a proxy for inaction cost — prolonged concealment is associated with worse mental health outcomes, though suicide attempts are a more extreme outcome than regret per se.
  2. [2] Psychological Bulletin (APA) — Sexual Orientation Concealment and Mental Health: A Conceptual and Meta-Analytic Review
    Sexual Orientation Concealment and Mental Health: A Conceptual and Meta-Analytic Review
    Statistic
    Across 193 studies (n = 92,236), concealment showed a small positive association with internalizing mental health problems (ESr = 0.126)
    Excerpt
    “"Across 193 studies (n = 92,236), the meta-analysis finds a small positive association between sexual orientation concealment and internalizing mental health problems (i.e., depression, anxiety, distress, problematic eating; ESr = 0.126; 95% CI [0.102, 0.151]) and a small negative association between concealment and substance use problems (ESr = −0.061; 95% CI [−0.096, −0.026])." ”
    Source data from
    2021-04-01
    Accessed
    2026-04-27
    Calculation
    Pachankis & Bränström meta-analysis published in Psychological Bulletin. The effect size (r = 0.126) is small but robust across 92,236 participants. This supports the inaction-side framing: concealment carries a measurable mental health cost, though the relationship is complex — concealment can also protect against discrimination in hostile environments. The meta-analysis does not directly measure regret, but documents the psychological burden that accumulates with sustained concealment.

Caveats

Neither side has a direct regret survey. The action-side 7% is the share of LGBT adults in Pew's 2013 survey who say their orientation is "mainly something negative" in their life — a loose proxy for regret among a predominantly out population, not a direct question about whether coming out was a mistake. The inaction-side 16% is the past-year suicide attempt prevalence among LGBTQ youth who delayed disclosure by two or more years (vs 12% among early disclosers) — a severe outcome measure, not a regret prevalence. The two rates measure different constructs (life satisfaction vs mental health crisis) in different populations (US adults in an online panel vs help-seeking youth ages 13–24 recruited via social media), so the delta is directional at best. Survivorship bias affects the action side: people who came out and withdrew from LGBT identification, or whose outcomes were so negative they declined an LGBT survey, are missing from the Pew data. The Trevor Project sample over-represents help-seeking youth and may overstate distress. Cultural and geographic context matters enormously: coming out in San Francisco in 2024 carries different risks than coming out in rural Mississippi or a country where homosexuality is criminalized. Social acceptance has shifted rapidly — Pew found 92% of LGBT adults in 2013 saw society as more accepting than a decade prior, and by 2025 96% reported being out to at least one person — so the action-side cost is likely declining over time.

Raw data: /api/decisions.json