Who are you having dinner with tonight? Perhaps you mustered the courage to ask your crush on a date? Or maybe your meal is more family stock-photo-esque, complete with smiling children eating all of their veggies without question. Or are you having dinner by yourself? Before you go off tweeting about being #ForeverAlone, you should know that eating alone is becoming more and more common.

In 2003, the tens of thousands of people who took part in the American Time Use Survey — a representative sample of Americans aged 15 to 85 — reported that they ate 32% of their meals alone. As the survey-takers continued collecting data over the years, that number rose to 35% in 2015.

A three percent increase doesn’t sound like that much. But it does translate to the average American eating alone one extra day per month. And, as you might guess, that extra day is not distributed evenly throughout the population.