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what to talk about with your boyfriend

What to talk about with your boyfriend depends on two things: staying genuinely curious about him and mixing light, fun topics with deeper, more meaningful ones over time.

Quick Scoop

Here’s a practical, save-and-use list of what to talk about with your boyfriend so things feel natural, not forced.

Easy, Everyday Conversation Starters

These are low-pressure topics that work over text, in person, or on call.

  • How his day actually felt (best and worst moment, not just “how was your day”).
  • Stuff he’s into right now: music, shows, games, podcasts, YouTube channels.
  • Food talk: favorite meals, worst thing he’s ever eaten, places you want to try together.
  • Funny work/school stories or awkward moments from the week.
  • Plans for the weekend or next holiday, even if it’s something small like a movie night.

Example mini-dialogue:

You: “What was the best part of your day, and what would you erase if you could?”
Him: “Best was lunch with the guys; worst was my boss’s random meeting.”

Deep Topics That Build Connection

Use these when you’re both relaxed and have time to talk (late-night calls, walks, car rides).

  • Childhood: favorite memories, hardest moments, people who shaped him.
  • Dreams and goals: dream job, where he’d love to live, what a “good life” looks like to him.
  • Values: what matters most (loyalty, freedom, family, honesty, etc.).
  • How he’s changed: what he’s learned in the last few years, what he’s proud of in himself.
  • Love and relationships: what makes him feel loved, what makes a relationship feel safe.

You don’t need to ask them like an interview—pick one and let it flow.

Fun, Playful Questions (So It Doesn’t Get Boring)

These keep the mood light and help you learn the weird, fun sides of each other.

  • “If our relationship was a movie, what genre would it be?”
  • “If you suddenly became rich, what’s the first ridiculous thing you’d buy?”
  • “What’s the funniest thing that’s ever happened to you?”
  • “If you could instantly become an expert in anything , what would it be?”
  • “If I were an animal, what would I be and why?”

These work really well at night when you both feel talkative but don’t want to get super serious.

Talking About You Two (The Relationship)

Use this to strengthen the bond and avoid that “we’re together but disconnected” feeling.

  • What you appreciate about each other: specific traits or moments you loved.
  • Favorite memories together: firsts, funniest dates, embarrassing stories you survived.
  • Future “us” ideas: trips, pets, the kind of home you’d like one day (no need for heavy timelines).
  • How you handle stress and how to support each other better.
  • Relationship check-in: what’s going well, anything small that could be better.

Example questions:

  • “When do you feel most connected to me?”
  • “What’s one little thing I do that you really like but maybe never told me?”

When Things Feel Dry or Awkward

A lot of couples hit a “we’ve talked about everything” phase; it’s normal.

Tips:

  • Switch environments: talk while walking, cooking, or playing a game—it’s easier than staring at each other trying to “think of something.”
  • Use “lists” to spark ideas: bucket lists, dream trips, movies you want to watch, skills you’d like to learn together.
  • Rotate themes: one night childhood stories, another night future plans, another just funny hypotheticals.

Things to Be Careful About

Some topics need gentleness or timing: mental health, family trauma, past relationships, money struggles, or anything that could trigger shame.

  • Ask permission first: “Is it okay if I ask you something a bit personal?”
  • Accept “I don’t want to talk about that right now” without pushing.
  • If serious issues like self-harm, abuse, or violence come up, encourage him (and yourself, if needed) to reach out to a trusted adult or professional support.

Tiny Script You Can Use Tonight

You can literally say:

“I feel like we always talk about the same stuff. Want to try something different and ask each other random questions—fun ones and maybe a few deeper ones?”

Then pick one light question and one deeper one from the sections above and see where it goes.

TL;DR: If you’re stuck on what to talk about with your boyfriend, mix everyday life, deeper dreams and values, playful hypotheticals, and “us” questions about your relationship, and let each answer naturally lead to the next.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.