ABSTRACT For survivors of sexual assault, navigating privacy boundaries can be challenging. Communication privacy management theory posits privacy and disclosure as a dialectical tension. As boundaries are negotiated, breached, and renegotiated, people are faced with examining the roles ownership, control, and turbulence play when regulating their private information, particularly around the highly sensitive topic of sexual assault in a romantic relationship where the relational risk is high. Through qualitative, semi-structured interviews (n = 21) and a phronetic iterative approach to data analysis, we examined the ongoing privacy management of survivors of sexual assault in romantic relationships. The results of this study offer insight into the ways participants controlled their personal information through the privacy management process and the effects of incongruent privacy management on participants, their partners, and the relationship.