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Men Who Cheat Think These 15 Excuses Sound Smart (They Don’t)

Updated on December 8, 2025 by TMM Staff · Dating & Confidence

Man sits on a bed looking upset while a woman gestures and speaks angrily behind him.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

There are excuses men use for cheating that they think make them look reasonable, but anyone paying attention can spot the cracks instantly. You deserve honest conversations, not recycled lines meant to soften the blow of betrayal. Cheating is always a choice, and the excuses that try to justify it only reveal the mindset behind the decision. When you understand the patterns, you stop falling for the surface-level explanations and start recognizing the real issues underneath. This article lays them out clearly so you can see them for what they are and decide how to handle them with clarity and self-respect.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • “I wasn’t getting my needs met.”
  • “You don’t care about me anymore.”
  • “I just can’t be monogamous.”
  • “It was just a one-time thing, and it meant nothing.”
  • “I was drunk and not thinking straight.”
  • “We’re just friends, and it wasn’t serious.”
  • “I love you, I just made a mistake.”
  • “You changed, and things weren’t the same anymore.”
  • “It’s just sex and it didn’t mean anything.”
  • “My job and stress pushed me into a bad place.”
  • “I was feeling lonely and disconnected.”
  • “Everyone else does it.”
  • “I deserved this because life has been hard.”
  • “Things weren’t exciting anymore.”
  • “I can’t help it and I’m wired this way.”

“I wasn’t getting my needs met.”

Shirtless man sitting on a bed looking distraught, a woman lies in bed behind him.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

This excuse sounds convincing at first because frustration in a relationship is real, but using it to justify infidelity is an avoidance strategy. A man who chooses cheating over communication is choosing the easiest escape, not the hardest truth. If he genuinely felt neglected, he had countless opportunities to speak up or walk away instead of sneaking around. Ask yourself why addressing the issue directly felt harder than betraying the person he committed to. The answer usually says more about emotional maturity than unmet needs.

“You don’t care about me anymore.”

Two people, a man and a woman, standing and pointing fingers at each other in an argument.
©Curated Lifestyle/Unsplash.com

This is a classic blame shift that tries to make the betrayed partner responsible for the cheater’s decisions. It frames the affair as a reaction instead of a conscious choice, which conveniently removes accountability. Anyone can feel disconnected at times, but twisting that into justification for betrayal shows a lack of emotional honesty. When someone claims they cheated because they felt uncared for, what they are really saying is that they chose the path that required the least vulnerability. Caring about yourself includes refusing to accept excuses that rewrite reality.

“I just can’t be monogamous.”

A man sits on the floor talking with hand gestures while a woman sits in bed.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

If a man truly believes he cannot commit to one partner, the responsible thing is to be upfront about it from the beginning. Cheating and then claiming monogamy is impossible is simply a way to dodge the discomfort of accountability. There are plenty of relationship structures out there that do not require exclusivity, but they all require honesty. Choosing to break the rules instead of admitting you want different ones is not a philosophy problem; it is a character problem. The truth is that most men who say this only discover their supposed nature after they get caught.

“It was just a one-time thing, and it meant nothing.”

Woman in yellow sweater looks away, man in blue shirt reaches out with an open hand.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

Minimizing the affair is a way to reduce the emotional fallout, but the damage comes from the betrayal itself, not the frequency. Whether it happened once or a hundred times, the trust was still broken with intention. When someone says it meant nothing, it often reveals how casually they treat the boundaries of their relationship. What matters is the pattern behind the decision, not the number of times it was carried out. If it truly meant nothing to them, they should be able to understand why it means everything to you.

“I was drunk and not thinking straight.”

A man in a dark shirt leans on a dark wooden bar in front of shelves of bottles.
©Egor Myznik/Unsplash.com

Alcohol lowers inhibitions, but it does not create desires that were never there. Blaming intoxication is a weak attempt to separate the action from the intention. Every adult knows the situations they put themselves in before they ever take a drink. If a man behaves completely differently only when drinking, the problem is not the alcohol; it is who he becomes when the mask slips. Responsibility does not disappear just because judgment was impaired for a few hours.

“We’re just friends, and it wasn’t serious.”

Man holds a phone and argues with a woman who has her hand over her chest.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

When someone feels the need to hide conversations, delete messages, or downplay the closeness, the friendship is already crossing lines. Emotional intimacy is often the first place cheating starts, even if nothing physical has happened yet. The moment secrecy enters the picture, trust leaves. If you have to convince someone that a relationship is harmless, it probably is not. Friendship becomes a cover when the real issue is boundary-breaking dressed up as innocence.

“I love you, I just made a mistake.”

Man sitting on a bed comforting a sad-looking woman with a hand on her head.
©Vitaly Gariev/Unsplash.com

People love to call deliberate actions a mistake because it sounds softer, but cheating requires planning, secrecy, and deception. You cannot accidentally maintain an entire separate connection behind someone’s back. Love is not measured by how quickly someone apologizes after getting caught; it is measured by the choices they make when no one is looking. A man can love you and still lack the discipline to protect that love. That is the uncomfortable part most excuses try to gloss over.

“You changed, and things weren’t the same anymore.”

A woman in a striped top looks away while a man leans against a wall in the background.
©Lia Bekyan/Unsplash.com

Relationships evolve and so do the people in them. Claiming that a partner’s growth or struggles justify cheating is a way to avoid adapting, communicating, or facing conflict head-on. It is easier to blame someone else’s changes than admit you did not want to show up for the hard parts. The irony is that most relationships fall apart not because people change but because someone refuses to grow alongside them. Change is not a valid excuse for betrayal, it is simply an excuse.

“It’s just sex and it didn’t mean anything.”

Woman looking upward with a distressed expression, man looks down in the background.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

This is an attempt to separate physical intimacy from emotional responsibility. The truth is that the meaning behind the act is defined by the relationship, not by the cheater’s personal interpretation. Even if there were no feelings involved, the betrayal still cuts deep because it breaks an agreement. Sex without emotion is still sex without trust, and trust is the foundation that keeps relationships stable. Minimizing the emotional weight does not repair the damage.

“My job and stress pushed me into a bad place.”

Close-up of a distressed man in a shirt and tie holding his forehead in shadow.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

Work stress is real, but using it as a reason to cross lines is a sign of poor coping skills. People under pressure look for outlets, but healthy outlets do not involve deceit. Cheating during stressful periods reveals that under strain, the person defaults to self-indulgence instead of discipline. If stress always becomes the excuse, nothing prevents it from happening again the next time life gets hard. Your career should challenge you, not compromise your integrity.

“I was feeling lonely and disconnected.”

Person in a hoodie and baseball cap sitting on a dark kitchen floor with head in hands.
©Eastman Childs/Unsplash.com

Loneliness can happen even in long relationships, but using it to justify cheating skips over the real solution, which is connection through honesty. When a man chooses an affair to deal with emotional emptiness, he is trying to fill a gap with secrecy and adrenaline. That only deepens the loneliness later. Emotional pain is not a permission slip to betray someone who trusts you. It is a sign that something needs real attention, not hidden distractions.

“Everyone else does it.”

Man looks away with an annoyed expression as a woman dramatically argues with an open mouth.
©Fotos/Unsplash.com

Normalizing cheating is an easy way to avoid the discomfort of being called out. Just because infidelity is common does not make it acceptable or healthy. A person who uses this excuse is trying to blend into the crowd so they do not have to face the weight of their choices. You do not build a strong relationship by comparing yourself to the lowest standard. Integrity is personal, not a group project.

“I deserved this because life has been hard.”

Man and woman in plaid shirts sitting on a couch, talking seriously to each other.
©Vitaly Gariev/Unsplash.com

Tying cheating to stress, pressure, or feeling unappreciated turns infidelity into some kind of reward system. That mindset places pleasure above responsibility every single time. When a man convinces himself that he deserves the affair, he is framing selfishness as self-care. Nothing is grounding or healing about creating chaos to escape discomfort. If anything, it shows that he prioritizes temporary relief over long-term respect.

“Things weren’t exciting anymore.”

Woman looking sad on a couch, man sits with his back to her looking away.
©Curated Lifestyle/Unsplash.com

Boredom becomes a convenient narrative when someone wants novelty without having the conversations required to improve the relationship. Long-term commitments require effort to keep the spark alive, and avoiding that work by cheating is a sign of emotional laziness. Even strong relationships hit plateaus, but mature partners address them directly. Excitement comes from intention, not shortcuts. Choosing an affair to feel alive usually exposes a lack of presence in the relationship, not a lack of passion.

“I can’t help it and I’m wired this way.”

A distressed woman covers her face with her hand, a man sits solemnly behind her.
©Curated Lifestyle/Unsplash.com

Blaming nature, biology, or instinct is the ultimate avoidance of responsibility. Humans are capable of discipline and self-control, and using genetics as a shield ignores that fact completely. A man who says he is wired to cheat is simply admitting he does not want to develop the habits required to stay loyal. If you choose monogamy, you choose the work that comes with it. Anything less is just a story someone tells themselves to avoid accountability.

Dating & Confidence

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About TMM Staff

The Modest Man staff writers are experts in men's lifestyle who love teaching guys how to live their best lives.

If an article is published under TMM Staff, that means multiple writers worked on it. For example, sometimes several of us have experience with a certain brand, so we collaborate to publish a more thorough review.

Or, if an article was originally written by one person, but then it was updated by someone else, we'll re-publish it under TMM Staff.

Remember: all of our articles (including those below) are written by real people with decades of combined experience in men's fashion and lifestyle topics.

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