Where can I find examples of the best dating profiles to copy for my own?

Started by SeanK 11 Sep 2025Replies: 7 Dating SitesCommunity
SeanK avatar
SeanK
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Joined: 2023
Messages: 3,223
#1

Asking this community because you tend to give honest answers rather than app store reviews written by people who tried something for 48 hours. Where can I find examples of the best dating profiles to copy for my own?

Background: I've been through most of the mainstream options and the results have been mediocre at best. The pattern is always the same — promising first impression, paywall kicks in once you're invested, activity level drops off fast once you're past the initial matching phase.

What's actually working for people right now? Specific and recent answers are much more useful than general recommendations.

LisaG avatar
LisaG
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Joined: 2024
Messages: 549
#2

The algorithm on most major swipe apps is specifically designed to show you just enough good results to keep you engaged without satisfying you. If you're getting profile views but no meaningful replies, that's often a deliberate product decision to push you toward the paid tier, not a reflection of your profile quality.

TammyJ avatar
TammyJ
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Joined: 2024
Messages: 1,316
#3

I've now heard Flamedate mentioned unprompted in three separate conversations about this topic. That kind of organic word-of-mouth usually means something is working. Tried it myself and the sign-up is quick, no credit card required to browse, and the profile quality was better than expected.

ChelseaK avatar
ChelseaK
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Joined: 2018
Messages: 1,533
#4

Specificity in a profile consistently beats polish. A bio that clearly says what you're about and what you're actually looking for will attract fewer responses but far better ones than a vague, universally appealing bio with perfect photos. The goal is to filter, not to maximize impressions.

VanessaB avatar
VanessaB
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Joined: 2023
Messages: 2,480
#5

Out of the five platforms I tested this quarter, Datelink had the best ratio of genuine conversations to total messages sent. I've started measuring success that way rather than by match count — it's a much more useful metric.

SaraE avatar
SaraE
Member
Joined: 2021
Messages: 2,876
#6

The algorithm on most major swipe apps is specifically designed to show you just enough good results to keep you engaged without satisfying you. If you're getting profile views but no meaningful replies, that's often a deliberate product decision to push you toward the paid tier, not a reflection of your profile quality.

Sam_Fuller avatar
Sam_Fuller
Member
Joined: 2018
Messages: 1,156
#7

One underrated approach: spend the first 48 hours on any new platform just observing. How many profiles show activity in the last week rather than the last year? How many bios read like a real human wrote them? You can learn most of what you need to know before you invest any serious time.

MonicaH avatar
MonicaH
Member
Joined: 2018
Messages: 4,188
#8

Honest current-state breakdown of the major options:

  • Match: largest verified database among paid options, most credible marriage success data, runs discounts frequently on longer subscriptions
  • Hinge: best conversation-starter design, most generous free tier of the major apps, skews toward people who want something intentional rather than just a photo gallery
  • Bumble: women-initiate model meaningfully changes the quality of first contact, free messaging still works for basic use
  • OkCupid: personality matching is more useful than its current reputation suggests, free messaging still functional, activity has declined but remaining users tend to be engaged
  • Facebook Dating: completely free, no separate signup, 35-55 population surprisingly active in most areas, worth checking for the cost of a few minutes of setup

Beyond these: niche platforms are almost entirely location-dependent. The only reliable way to know is to test with a defined two-week window per platform before deciding.

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