As a couple of women have mentioned, being wanted and loved for who you are, as a woman, in your current packaging, with all of your parts, can be transformative.
I myself am somewhat torn; I have experienced and now believe that the right person or persons for me could very well be out there and be absolutely tickled pink that I am a woman with a penis etc etc. I can theorize that I will increase my "chance" of finding him or her by making my body conform to standard societal expectations for my gender, but really, I am such an odd duck, those statistics don't matter at all. My being transsexual is still one of the most "normal" and every day aspects of me.
I do know that a significant portion of my soul, one of my spirits, is extremely dysphoric, about being configured physically like a guy in that way. And the portions of my soul, some are very masculine, but not so attached to the parts, and would willingly sacrifice his/their? comfort for her sanity. So as the person who is all of these spirits and beings at once, what is the right and ethical and happymaking thing to do? I really don't know.
I can tell you that I was blown away, but intrigued, the first time I made friends with a very female, very femme, woman who had no intention of getting bottom surgery - she had coverage, had it paid for, and still spent her own funds on breast augmentation and on her planned for butt amplification and wasn't comfortable telling me, an obviously body-dysphoric trans woman, that she absolutely wasn't going to get it. Her only lament was that guys thought she was so hot but weren't interested in settling down. I have sisters and nieces and a mom and female cousins, and that is not a uniquely transgender complaint. And she was quite rational about the fact that her body, fully intact, with a woman's penis, had far more nerve endings and potential for sexual pleasure than she would have once inverted, rearranged and reduced. So I think she was right, if your benefit (in reducing dysphoria) does not exceed the cost (not only in money, but in nerve endings and in risk) then you really shouldn't do it, despite what your more body-dysphoric sisters may decide.