However, women who enjoy a good relationship with their in-laws have a 20 per cent greater chance of separating.
Researchers suggested that wives who like their in-laws may find it hard to set boundaries, and in the coming years may feel they are meddling, the 'Daily Mail' reported.
Researchers at the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research studied 373 same-race couples over 26 years.
They found that husbands who made the effort to get on with their mother-in-law were the ones most likely to stay married.
All the couples were between the ages of 25 and 37 and in their first year of marriage when the study began in 1986.
Lead researcher Dr Terri Orbuch, a psychologist and research professor, asked each of the couples to rank how close they felt to their in-laws out of four. She has followed them ever since.
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"It's a good thing if men get along with their in-laws because these ties connect the husband to the wife," Orbuch said.
For women, however, the situation is rather different.
"Because relationships are so important to women, their identity as a wife and mother is central to their being. They interpret what their in-laws say and do as interference into their identity as a spouse and parent," she said.
Orbuch advises parents who have a son to tread carefully, as a daughter-in-law will probably be more sensitive to their interference.
Wives should be careful about sharing details of their marriages so that everyone respects each other's boundaries, while husbands should make sure they treat their in-laws as 'special and important'.