Young Love may refer to:
- Music
- Young Love (Jedward album), Jedward's third studio album
- "Young Love" (Jedward song)
- Young Love (Mat Kearney album), Mat Kearney's fourth studio album
- Young Love (J. Williams album), the debut album of J. Williams, a New Zealand R&B artist
- Young Love (Connie Smith and Nat Stuckey album), the collaboration album between American country artists, Connie Smith and Nat Stuckey
- "Young Love" (1956 song), a song written by Ric Cartey and Carole Joyner, popularized by Tab Hunter, Sonny James, and The Crew-Cuts
- "Young Love" (Janet Jackson song)
- "Young Love" (Mystery Jets song)
- Young Love (band), an American electronic rock band
- Young Love EP, an EP by the band
- "Young Love", by Carter's Chord
- "Young Love (Strong Love)", by The Judds
- Other
- Young Love (comic), a romance comics series created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby for Crestwood Publications, and later continued by DC Comics
- Young Love (play), a 1928 Broadway play starring Dorothy Gish
- Young Love (1974 film), a television film starring Meredith Baxter
Famous quotes containing the words young love, young and/or love:
“With my desire to write he seemed in full sympathy, and in urging our early marriage he argued that my first necessity was leisure in which to develop and to master my craft. It appeared to me that with such a man as teacher and guide I could not fail, and it was in a queer mixture of young love and vaulting ambition that I became a wife.”
—Rheta Childe Dorr (18661948)
“Family is the first school for young children, and parents are powerful models.”
—Alice Sterling Honig (20th century)
“We should be careful never to imagine, that the wedding-day is the burial of love, but that in reality love then begins its best life; and if we set out upon that principle, and are mindful to keep it up, and give due attention and aid to the progress of love thus brought into the well ordered well sheltered garden, we may enjoy I believe as much happiness as is consistent with the imperfection of our present state of being.”
—James Boswell (17401795)