Work Engagement of Dual-Working Couples: Dissimilarity and Its Relation to Both PartnersWell-Being Maša Tonković Grabovac 1 & Svjetlana Salkičević 1 & Ajana Löw Stanić 1 # Springer Science+Business Media New York 2015 Abstract Work engagement is a positive, fulfilling, work-related state of mind that is characterized by vigor, dedication, and absorption. Work engaged individuals not only function better at work, but also transfer these benefits to home - research has shown that work engagement crosses over between marital partners. In previous studies on crossover, this phenomenon was evidenced only by significant correlation between self-reports of partnerswork engagement, while measures of dissimilarity between partners were completely ignored. However, work engagement dissimilarity - with one partner being highly enthusiastic and immersed in his/her work and the other one lowly - could be related to some aspects of both partnerswell-being and might improve its prediction. Hence, the goal of this study was to examine work engagement dissimilarity within dual-earning couples. In addition to self-report measures, we collected partners ratings of work engagement and its subdimensions as well. The data collected on 178 dual-working Croatian couples showed significant correlation of overall work engage- ment, vigor, dedication and absorption between various pairs of self- and other-ratings measures (partnersself-ratings; self-ratings and partners ratings; and partners self- ratings and his/her ratings of work engagement of the partner). Moreover, difference in self-ratings and ratings of partners work engagement showed negative correlation with life satisfaction of both partners, suggesting that work engagement dissimilarity has a potential to be related to some aspects of partnerswell-being. Keywords Work engagement . Work engagement dissimilarity . Work engagement crossover . Dual-working couples . Other-reports Curr Psychol DOI 10.1007/s12144-015-9326-x * Maša Tonković Grabovac masa.tonkovic@ffzg.hr 1 Department of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, Ivana Lučića 3, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia