7 Ways Narcissists Keep Score in Relationships
Healthy relationships are not meant to feel like business transactions.
When someone genuinely cares about you, acts of kindness are given freely. Support is offered because they want to help. Love is not measured on a scoreboard.
With narcissists, however, relationships often feel very different.
Many narcissists treat relationships like competitions where every favour, sacrifice, gift, and contribution is carefully tracked and remembered. Rather than viewing relationships as partnerships, they often see them as exchanges where someone must always owe them something.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Here are seven ways narcissists keep score in relationships.
1. They Constantly Remind You What They’ve Done for You
A narcissist rarely allows a good deed to remain in the past.
Perhaps they lent you money.
Helped you move house.
Supported you during a difficult period.
Bought you gifts.
Instead of simply helping because they cared, they repeatedly remind you of their generosity.
Months or even years later, those favours may still be mentioned.
The message becomes clear:
“Look at everything I’ve done for you.”
Rather than creating gratitude, this often creates guilt and obligation.
The favour becomes less about helping and more about establishing future leverage.

2. They Turn Gifts Into Debts
Healthy giving comes without hidden conditions.
Narcissistic giving often comes with expectations.
The birthday present.
The expensive meal.
The favour.
The thoughtful gesture.
What initially appears generous may later become something they expect repayment for.
The repayment may not be financial.
Instead, they may expect loyalty.
Attention.
Compliance.
Forgiveness.
Special treatment.
The gift was never entirely free.
It came with invisible strings attached.
Many victims only realise this later when the narcissist suddenly reminds them of everything they have supposedly done.
3. They Count Their Efforts but Ignore Yours
One of the most frustrating aspects of narcissistic scorekeeping is the double standard.
They remember every sacrifice they have ever made.
Every favour.
Every act of kindness.
Every contribution.
Meanwhile, your efforts are minimised, ignored, or forgotten entirely.
You may spend years supporting them emotionally.
Helping them financially.
Making sacrifices for the relationship.
Being available whenever they need you.
Yet when conflict arises, those contributions mysteriously disappear from the conversation.
Only their efforts matter.
Only their sacrifices count.
This creates a distorted version of reality where they always appear to be giving more than they actually are.
4. They Use Past Favours During Arguments
Perhaps you’ve noticed that whenever you confront a narcissist, the conversation suddenly changes direction.
You raise a concern.
You discuss their behaviour.
You attempt to address a problem.
Then suddenly they begin listing everything they’ve ever done for you.
The argument is no longer about their actions.
It’s now about your supposed lack of appreciation.
Past favours become weapons.
Their generosity becomes evidence that they couldn’t possibly be at fault.
The original issue gets buried beneath a list of old sacrifices and contributions.
This tactic often leaves victims feeling guilty for raising legitimate concerns.
5. They Expect Recognition for Basic Responsibilities
Healthy adults generally understand that certain responsibilities are simply part of being a partner, parent, friend, or family member.
Yet narcissists often expect admiration for doing the bare minimum.
They may want praise for:
Going to work.
Paying bills.
Helping with their own children.
Showing basic courtesy.
Fulfilling responsibilities that should already be expected.
While appreciation is healthy in any relationship, narcissists often crave excessive recognition.
Ordinary behaviour becomes extraordinary.
Basic responsibilities become sacrifices.
And if sufficient praise isn’t given, resentment often follows.
6. They Keep Emotional Score
Narcissists don’t only keep score of favours.
They also keep score of perceived offences.
A disagreement from five years ago.
A criticism from last year.
A boundary you set months earlier.
These incidents may be remembered in remarkable detail.
During future disagreements, old grievances suddenly reappear.
You thought the issue had been resolved.
The narcissist did not.
Their emotional scoreboard remains active.
This creates a situation where you can never fully move forward because old mistakes are continually being resurrected.
Meanwhile, they often expect immediate forgiveness for their own behaviour.
Again, the double standard becomes obvious.
7. They Use Scorekeeping to Create Guilt and Control
Ultimately, narcissistic scorekeeping serves a larger purpose.
Control.
The more indebted you feel, the harder it becomes to challenge them.
The harder it becomes to say no.
The harder it becomes to set boundaries.
The harder it becomes to leave.
If they can convince you that you owe them everything, they gain enormous influence over your decisions.
Many victims remain trapped in unhealthy relationships because they feel guilty.
They feel responsible.
They feel they must repay years of favours and sacrifices.
The narcissist’s scoreboard becomes a powerful tool of manipulation.
Healthy Relationships Don’t Keep Score
One of the biggest differences between healthy and unhealthy relationships is how kindness is viewed.
Healthy people give because they care.
They help because they want to.
They support because the relationship matters.
They do not maintain a running total.
They do not constantly remind you what you owe them.
They do not use generosity as leverage.
They do not treat love like a transaction.
If someone repeatedly reminds you of everything they have done for you, pay attention.
True generosity doesn’t require an audience.
It doesn’t demand repayment.
And it certainly doesn’t come with a lifetime invoice attached.
Healthy relationships are built on mutual care, respect, and appreciation—not scoreboards, guilt, and control.
The moment you recognise the difference is often the moment you begin freeing yourself from the narcissist’s game.
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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