7 Covert Tactics Narcissists Use to Manipulate You
Not all manipulation is obvious.
In fact, some of the most emotionally damaging behaviour is not loud, aggressive, or clearly abusive at first glance. It is subtle, indirect, and often disguised as something else entirely—concern, humour, kindness, confusion, or even vulnerability.
This is what makes covert manipulation so difficult to identify in real time. It does not announce itself. Instead, it slowly changes how you think, how you feel, and eventually how you see yourself.
Over time, these patterns can lead to self-doubt, emotional confusion, and a loss of trust in your own judgement.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Here are seven covert tactics often seen in manipulative dynamics.
1. Playing the victim
One of the most common covert tactics is victim positioning.
Rather than taking responsibility for their actions, the individual presents themselves as the one who has been wronged. No matter what the situation is, the focus shifts away from their behaviour and onto their suffering.
This can be very disorientating because it changes the emotional direction of the interaction. Instead of addressing the issue, you may find yourself comforting or reassuring the very person whose behaviour caused the problem.
Over time, this can create a pattern where accountability is avoided entirely, and you begin to question whether raising concerns is even fair.

2. Guilt tripping
Guilt is a powerful emotional tool when used manipulatively.
Instead of directly asking for what they want, guilt is introduced indirectly. You may feel responsible for their emotions, their reactions, or their disappointment.
This often leads to compliance that is not based on genuine choice, but on emotional pressure.
The difficulty with guilt-based manipulation is that it does not feel like control. It feels like obligation. And that is what makes it effective.
3. Backhanded compliments
Covert manipulation often hides behind language that appears positive on the surface.
Statements such as:
- “I wish I had your confidence”
- “You’re brave to wear that”
- “You’re different from other people”
can sound like compliments, but often carry subtle criticism underneath.
The result is emotional confusion. You are left unsure whether you have been praised or undermined.
This uncertainty is intentional in many cases, as it keeps you mentally engaged and self-questioning.
4. Plausible deniability
One of the most difficult tactics to challenge is ambiguity.
Comments or actions are often delivered in a way that can be interpreted multiple ways. If confronted, the response is usually denial:
- “That’s not what I meant”
- “You’re overthinking it”
- “You took it the wrong way”
This creates a situation where your emotional response is questioned instead of the original behaviour.
Over time, this can lead to self-doubt, as you begin to second-guess your interpretation of events.
5. Silent punishment
Silence can be a form of control when used strategically.
Instead of addressing conflict directly, communication is withdrawn. This may include ignoring messages, withholding affection, or emotional distance.
The impact of this behaviour is often strong because it creates uncertainty. You are left trying to understand what has happened and how to fix it.
This often results in self-blame or over-explaining in an attempt to restore connection.
In reality, the silence itself becomes the message.
6. Subtle sabotage
Not all manipulation is direct. Sometimes it appears as advice, concern, or “helpful feedback”.
However, the underlying effect may be to undermine confidence or delay progress.
This can look like:
- discouraging your goals
- questioning your decisions
- highlighting risks without solutions
- planting doubt in moments of progress
Because it is not openly aggressive, it is often difficult to identify. It can even feel like support at first.
But over time, it can weaken self-belief and increase dependence on external validation.
7. Creating confusion through inconsistency
One of the most destabilising patterns is inconsistency.
Behaviour may shift suddenly:
- warm and engaging one day
- distant or critical the next
This unpredictability keeps you emotionally alert, trying to understand what changed and how to restore the positive version of the relationship.
Instead of focusing on your own needs, your attention becomes centred on decoding the other person.
This emotional instability can create strong attachment because the brain naturally seeks patterns and resolution.
Why these tactics are so effective
The reason covert manipulation works is because it rarely feels like manipulation in the moment.
Each behaviour can be explained away individually:
- “They were just joking”
- “They didn’t mean it like that”
- “Maybe I misunderstood”
- “They’re just going through a lot”
It is the pattern over time that creates the impact, not a single event.
The psychological impact
Over time, these tactics can lead to:
- self-doubt
- overthinking
- emotional exhaustion
- guilt and responsibility for others’ behaviour
- loss of confidence in your own perception
One of the most damaging outcomes is disconnection from your own emotional certainty. You begin to question what is real, what is acceptable, and what you are “allowed” to feel.
How to protect yourself
Awareness is the first layer of protection.
When you can name a pattern, it becomes harder for it to operate unconsciously. You begin to see behaviour as behaviour, rather than internalising it as your fault.
Key protective steps include:
- trusting consistent patterns over isolated moments
- observing behaviour, not explanations
- recognising emotional confusion as a signal
- maintaining boundaries even when guilt is triggered
Final thoughts
Covert manipulation is not always dramatic. In many cases, it is quiet, gradual, and emotionally confusing.
It does not rely on obvious control. It relies on doubt.
And that is why understanding these patterns is so important.
Because once you begin to recognise them, you stop reacting to confusion—and start responding to reality.
And that shift changes everything.
Check these out!
Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist
15 Rules To Deal With Narcissistic People.: How To Stay Sane And Break The Chain.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Boundaries with Narcissists: Safeguarding Emotional, Psychological, and Physical Independence.
Healing from Narcissistic Abuse: A Guided Journal for Recovery and Empowerment: Reclaim Your Identity, Build Self-Esteem, and Embrace a Brighter Future
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