Workplaces create the conditions for connection. Shared goals, long hours, and overlapping interests mean people spend a significant portion of their time around others who think similarly and operate at a similar pace. It’s a setting where professional relationships can sometimes turn personal.
In fact, 60% of adults have had a workplace romance.
When you sense a coworker may be into you, the situation can become complicated quickly. The way you respond determines whether it stays manageable or starts affecting team dynamics, communication, and your day-to-day work.
Why This Happens More Than You Think
Attraction at work comes from proximity and alignment. People choose roles based on mission, values, and the type of work they want to do, which often places them alongside others with similar mindsets and priorities.
Kaila Lopez and Kyle Hagge, the co-hosts of Morning Brew’s work-life podcast Per My Last Email, have pointed to this dynamic directly. Speaking on HR Brew’s People Person podcast, Hagge explained, “You’re attracted to a place to work because of the mission, the values, the type of work. And so you are probably going to be around people that are interested in the same things as you, have the same values as you. So it’s not shocking that people who spend a lot of time together, have similar interests…develop feelings for other people at work.”
The environment itself increases the likelihood of connection.
First: Confirm What You’re Actually Seeing
Before reacting, take a step back and assess the situation carefully.
Friendly behavior, increased collaboration, or consistent communication can be part of a normal working relationship. Misreading intent can create unnecessary tension.
Focus on patterns:
- Are they trying to spend time with you outside of work contexts?
- Has communication become more personal?
- Have they hinted at interest directly or indirectly?
Give yourself enough information before deciding how to respond.
Decide What You Want
Your response matters more than their behavior.
There are three general positions:
- You’re interested
- You’re not interested
- You’re unsure
Each requires a different approach. What matters is being intentional instead of letting the situation develop without direction.
If You’re Not Interested: Set Boundaries Early
Clarity prevents escalation.
Avoiding the situation or trying to keep things overly comfortable can blur lines. A straightforward, professional approach keeps things grounded.
That can look like:
- Keeping conversations work-focused
- Limiting one-on-one interactions that feel ambiguous
- Declining invitations that move into personal territory
If needed, a direct statement works: “I value our working relationship and want to keep things professional.”
Early clarity makes the situation easier to manage.
If You Are Interested: Move With Awareness
Mutual interest introduces a different set of considerations. Workplace relationships carry added visibility and potential impact. Think through company policies, reporting structures and power dynamics, and how it could affect your team.
Take your time. Keep things private while you assess the situation. It also helps to align expectations early, including what happens if things don’t work out.
If You’re Unsure: Stay Neutral
Uncertainty is normal.
You don’t need to decide immediately, but your behavior should remain consistent. Mixed signals can create confusion and accelerate the situation unintentionally.
Keep interactions professional while you figure out your position. Space can help bring clarity.
Protect the Work Environment
The priority stays the same regardless of personal feelings: the work cannot suffer.
That means:
- Treating everyone consistently
- Keeping communication professional
- Avoiding involving others in speculation or gossip
Colleagues notice changes quickly. Maintaining consistency helps prevent unnecessary distractions.
Know When to Escalate
Most situations stay manageable with clear communication. If the behavior becomes persistent or uncomfortable, it moves beyond a personal matter. At that point, you should document interactions, reinforce boundaries, and involve HR if needed.
Taking action early prevents larger issues later.
The Bigger Picture
Workplaces bring together people with shared goals, values, and ways of thinking. Connection can grow naturally in that environment.
The key is handling it with awareness and clear boundaries. When approached thoughtfully, situations like this stay controlled, professional, and unlikely to disrupt the work itself.
















