The story of the human kiss begins in the canopy of a Miocene rainforest, roughly 21 million years ago, where our ape ancestors were pressing their lips together for reasons that had nothing to do with romance and everything to do with survival.

Let’s get the biggest misconception out of the way first: kissing is not uniquely human, at least the bare act of pressing lips together isn’t. The premise is intuitive, though: we are the species that built an entire cultural architecture around the act, from the first recorded kiss in a Mesopotamian clay tablet dated to around 4,500 years ago, to the elaborate rituals of courtship, greeting and farewell that vary across every society on Earth. It feels like ours. But biology suggests otherwise.

Chimpanzees kiss. Bonobos kiss. Orangutans press their lips together in moments of social tension and reconciliation. A 2025 study published in Evolution and Human Behavior from the University of Oxford traced the evolutionary history of kissing across the primate family tree.

The authors concluded that the behavior likely originated in the common ancestor of humans and all large apes, some 21 million years before our species existed. Even our extinct cousins, the Neanderthals, were almost certainly kissers, a conclusion supported by evidence that Homo sapiens and Neanderthals shared oral microbes via saliva transfer, and that they interbred.

So, the question is not really why humans kiss. The more interesting question is why we kiss the way we do — with such cultural weight, neurochemical intensity and emotional consequence.

The Evolutionary Conundrum Of The Human Kiss

Before going further, it helps to define the behavior precisely. For cross-species comparison, researchers working on the 2025 Evolution and Human Behavior study settled on a definition that strips away the romance: a kiss is non-aggressive, mouth-to-mouth contact that does not involve food transfer.

Unsexy, perhaps. But it turns out that even this minimal definition captures something ancient and deeply wired. But what makes kissing scientifically puzzling is that, by conventional Darwinian logic, it probably should not exist.

Mouth-to-mouth contact is an extraordinarily efficient vector for pathogen transmission. Saliva carries hundreds of bacterial species and multiple viruses, some of them serious. The behavior confers no direct caloric benefit, does not build shelter and does not, at face value at least, improve the odds of survival.

Instead, it is, in the blunt ledger of evolutionary accounting, expensive. And yet it persisted not just in humans, but across millions of years of primate evolution, surviving every major ecological upheaval in our lineage’s history.

Evolutionary biologist Dr. Matilda Brindle of Oxford, lead author of the 2025 study, has described this as an “evolutionary conundrum.” The framing is apt. Any behavior that carries genuine costs without obvious benefits should, over time, be selected against. That kissing was not — that it deepened and diversified as our lineage grew more complex — is itself a signal.

This means that kissing is paying for itself, biologically, in ways that are not immediately obvious. Three hypotheses have emerged to explain how.

The Three Possible Explanations Behind The Human Kiss

The grooming hypothesis is the oldest and, in some ways, the most elegant. A 2024 study in Evolutionary Anthropology by Adriano Lameira of the University of Warwick argues that kissing likely descended from the final stage of primate grooming: the moment when one ape, having combed through the fur of another, ends the session with a sucking motion of protruded lips against skin, latching onto debris or parasites.

However, over the course of human evolution, we lost our fur , and, in turn, the grooming sessions became shorter. But the terminal “kiss,” it seems, stayed — first as social bonding, then as something more.

Lameira’s analysis is careful to note that the transition was not inevitable. It depended on a particular ecological pressure: the shift of our hominid ancestors from forested habitats to more open, drier landscapes. On the ground, without dense fur to groom, mouth-contact became detached from its hygienic function and free to acquire new social meanings. The behavior was already there, embedded in our behavioral repertoire. Evolution simply repurposed it.

The genetic compatibility hypothesis is more surprising, and frankly a little humbling. When two people kiss, they are, without knowing it, running a biological assay on each other.

Research into the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), a cluster of genes central to immune function, has established that humans are unconsciously drawn to partners whose MHC profile differs from their own. The mechanism appears to be largely olfactory: a 1995 study published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B showed that women consistently preferred the scent of t-shirts worn by men with dissimilar MHC genes.

The evolutionary logic is straightforward. MHC-dissimilar partners produce offspring with broader immune repertoires that are better equipped to fight a wider range of pathogens. Couples who differ more at MHC loci show higher rates of successful IVF conception, shorter intervals between pregnancies and lower rates of miscarriage.

Research published in Scientific Reports has since linked HLA (the human-specific version of MHC) dissimilarity to partnership quality and sexual satisfaction. Kissing — with its intimacy, its proximity, its exchange of saliva — may be the mechanism through which we gather this genetic intelligence. A bad first kiss, then, is not a matter of technique. It may be your immune system speaking.

Then, the neurochemical bonding hypothesis explains why we keep kissing people we have already assessed and chosen. Kissing activates a cascade of brain chemistry: dopamine for desire and reward, oxytocin (sometimes called the “love hormone”) for trust and attachment, and endorphins for comfort and calm.

Research published in Psychoneuroendocrinology has demonstrated that oxytocin plays a key role in pair-bonding and that its release is triggered by physical closeness. Kissing, in this model, is a delivery mechanism for the chemistry that maintains long-term bonds, keeping attachment alive long after the novelty of a relationship has faded.

Taken together, these three hypotheses are not competing explanations; they are complementary layers. Kissing began, perhaps, as grooming. It was then co-opted as a tool for genetic assessment. And it was sustained, across evolutionary time, because of the powerful neurochemical rewards it generates. Each layer reinforced the others, turning a gesture of social hygiene into one of the most emotionally charged acts in the human behavioral repertoire.

Even For Humans, Kissing Is Not Universal

This is where intellectual honesty requires a pause. We have been talking about kissing as if it is something all humans do — when, in reality, they do not.

The same Oxford research that traced kissing back 21 million years also found that romantic or sexual kissing is only documented in approximately 46 percent of human cultures. In some societies, the behavior is pervasive and heavily ritualized. In others, it simply does not occur.

This is not a failure of those cultures to “discover” kissing. It is a reminder that even behaviors with deep evolutionary roots are shaped and constrained by cultural context. The biological architecture may be ancient and widespread; the cultural expression is neither.

This raises a question the 2025 study does not fully resolve: Is romantic kissing an evolved behavior that some cultures later suppressed, or a cultural invention that spread from certain populations?

The honest answer, at this stage of the science, is that we do not know with certainty. What the research does establish is that the capacity for kissing — the neural wiring, the chemosensory apparatus, the neurochemical machinery — appears to be a conserved primate trait, one that our species inherited and then elaborated in wildly different ways depending on where and how we live.

Perhaps that is the most revealing thing about kissing: it sits precisely at the intersection of nature and culture, biology and meaning; it’s one half ancient reflex, one half social invention.

When you lean in toward someone, something 21 million years old is stirring — something that once ended a grooming session in a Miocene forest, something that once helped an ancestor quietly assess whether this stranger had the right immune profile, something that floods a modern brain with dopamine and oxytocin and the particular warmth of being close.

The fact that it has also become the subject of poetry, literature and the entire Western canon of romantic cinema is, in evolutionary terms, a bonus.

Kissing is just one chapter in our evolutionary love story. Take my fun Evolution IQ Test and see how well you grasp the forces that shaped human connection.