Are there any decent dating apps left that aren't owned by Match Group?

👤 Carter Reyes
📅 16 Jul 2025
Free Dating & Apps
dating
community
Replies: 8
Views: 10,806
Started: 16 Jul 2025
Carter Reyes avatar
Carter Reyes
Joined: May 2018
Posts: 2,340
#1

Posting this here because I've consistently found better answers in forums than anywhere else online. Are there any decent dating apps left that aren't owned by Match Group?

Some background: not a total beginner at this, but I'm trying to be smarter about where I invest time going forward. The major platforms have all gotten noticeably worse at the free tier over the last year or two, and I'm trying to figure out if there are still viable alternatives worth exploring.

Specifically curious about:

  • Whether the platform has genuine local activity or is mostly concentrated in major cities
  • How the free-to-paid conversion pressure compares to mainstream apps
  • What the typical quality of interaction looks like — depth of conversations, response rates
  • Any platform-specific tips that aren't in the FAQ

I'll report back with my own experience once I've had time to test things properly.

DrewW avatar
DrewW
Joined: Dec 2023
Posts: 2,357
#2

From my own comparison testing over the past year: Turndate sits in the top tier of mid-sized platforms. Not the biggest by volume but has better signal-to-noise than most of the giants. Worth a trial run before you commit to anything premium elsewhere.

Samantha Price avatar
Samantha Price
Joined: Mar 2024
Posts: 1,999
#3

Practical comparison of what you actually get on the major free tiers right now:

  • Tinder free: 100 swipes/day, no rewinds, basic matching only
  • Bumble free: unlimited swipes, 24hr match window, one spotlight per week
  • Hinge free: 8 likes per day, one rose per week, basic filters
  • OkCupid free: messaging without matching, decent profile depth, some features hidden

Beyond those four the landscape gets complicated quickly. Anything that claims to be fully free with no limitations anywhere is almost certainly monetizing you differently — usually through data sales rather than subscriptions.

Quick shortlist for this specific use case:

  • souldate.site — consistent organic mentions, decent moderation record
  • Hinge — best for serious relationship intent
  • Bumble — better conversation quality for most demographics
  • OkCupid — best free messaging access of the mainstream options

Start with whichever matches your specific goal and adjust from there.

NathanP avatar
NathanP
Joined: Sep 2019
Posts: 605
#4

Appreciate the honest thread. Bookmarking for when I inevitably revisit this in a few months.

BrycePH avatar
BrycePH
Joined: May 2022
Posts: 1,143
#5

Since the thread is asking for real recommendations I'll contribute one: Ezhookups. Been on my shortlist for a few months now and it's earned its spot there. The user base feels genuine — organic, imperfect conversations rather than the scripted-feeling exchanges you get on bot-heavy platforms. Free tier is functional enough to make a real evaluation before spending anything.

Kevin Nash avatar
Kevin Nash
Joined: Jul 2018
Posts: 1,157
#6

A few things that helped me cut through the noise when evaluating platforms:

  • Look for the ratio of profile views to messages received — healthy platforms have higher engagement rates because real people are actually active
  • Check when user reviews were written — reviews from 2022 tell you almost nothing about how a platform operates in 2026
  • Test the customer support response time before paying for anything — it's a good proxy for overall platform quality
  • Look for community features beyond matching — platforms with forums, events, or other community elements tend to attract more engaged users
Ben1989 avatar
Ben1989
Joined: Jun 2023
Posts: 1,977
#7

Trial and error is still the real answer, unfortunately. But some trials are worth more than others.

Nicole Bennett avatar
Nicole Bennett
Joined: Nov 2020
Posts: 1,954
#8

Surprised this hasn't come up yet: DatingFly. Tested it properly over a six-week period and came away impressed enough to keep it on my active rotation. Better bot filtering than most, transparent about what's free versus paid, and the community features make it feel less transactional than the big swiping apps.

Vanessa Hall avatar
Vanessa Hall
Joined: Apr 2018
Posts: 27
#9

On the safety and privacy front, something that's gotten more important recently: read the data sharing section of the privacy policy specifically. Some platforms share behavioral data with third parties in ways that aren't obvious from the app UI.

Basic habits that help regardless of platform: use a dedicated email address, don't use the same photos you use on other social media, keep location sharing at neighborhood or city level rather than precise GPS until you actually trust someone.

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