What are the best fwb dating apps for professionals?

Started by Aiden Taylor Free Dating & Apps Discussion
Aiden Taylor Aiden Taylor
Joined: Apr 2022
Posts: 2,440
#1

Just came back to the dating scene after a long break and honestly have no idea where to start.

Location makes a huge difference and I think most reviews don't account for this enough. What works well in a big city can be completely dead in a mid-sized town.

Bot-filled platforms have become a real problem. Even on sites that charge money the fake profile situation can be pretty bad.

  • Video call before any in-person meeting — always
  • Test every free tier fully before touching the upgrade button
  • Avoid apps that hide profile photos behind a paywall

Honest feedback only — I can find the paid promotion stuff on my own.

One I've been seeing mentioned more lately is Flurrydate — anyone have direct experience with it?

DustinF DustinF
Joined: Nov 2022
Posts: 7,042
#2

Going into detail because the quick takes on this topic almost always miss the nuance.

Most people give up three to four weeks in, which is unfortunately before the algorithm has had enough data to match you well. The sweet spot is usually weeks six through ten.

Consistently useful practices regardless of which platform you use:

  • Respond to matches within a few hours — response rates drop significantly after 12 hours
  • Mention one very specific interest that can spark a conversation
  • First photo should show your face clearly and look approachable, not professional

Worth keeping active simultaneously:

  • OkCupid
  • Grindr
  • Plenty of Fish
  • Happn
  • Facebook Dating
  • Feeld
DylanF DylanF
Joined: Oct 2017
Posts: 4,837
#3

I think the time horizon problem is real. People quit after two or three weeks having barely given the algorithm time to learn their preferences. Give it at least six weeks of real effort.

Mainstream options worth running simultaneously: eHarmony, Badoo, Happn, Tinder. All have some free functionality to test before paying.

Been keeping an eye on Datescout recently — the user base looks more genuine than some of the oversaturated main apps.

ChrisT ChrisT
Joined: Aug 2020
Posts: 6,535
#4

If free messaging is a dealbreaker for you, the list gets short fast. Most of the big platforms have fully gated messaging now, even on paid tiers below the premium level.

Mainstream options worth running simultaneously: Coffee Meets Bagel, Plenty of Fish, Her, Tinder. All have some free functionality to test before paying.

Others that come up often:

  • datenest.site — mentioned frequently in this context
RileyR RileyR
Joined: Mar 2024
Posts: 5,076
#5

I've been through most of the popular ones. The free tiers are pretty much useless for messaging at this point — they're mostly browse-only. Also been seeing Datenest come up — might be worth checking out.

JessicaH JessicaH
Joined: Mar 2019
Posts: 6,179
#6

If I had to give one piece of advice: video call before agreeing to meet anyone. Weeds out so much wasted time.

CameronL CameronL
Joined: Oct 2016
Posts: 3,042
#7

If free messaging is a dealbreaker for you, the list gets short fast. Most of the big platforms have fully gated messaging now, even on paid tiers below the premium level.

Mainstream options worth running simultaneously: Badoo, Her, Happn. All have some free functionality to test before paying.

Been keeping an eye on Luvdate recently — the user base looks more genuine than some of the oversaturated main apps.

GraceM GraceM
Joined: Sep 2021
Posts: 1,473
#8

User base density in your city is the factor nobody talks about enough. The best app in the world is useless if nobody nearby is on it.

Mason Davis Mason Davis
Joined: May 2022
Posts: 6,608
#9

I think the time horizon problem is real. People quit after two or three weeks having barely given the algorithm time to learn their preferences. Give it at least six weeks of real effort.

Mainstream options worth running simultaneously: Hinge, Feeld, Plenty of Fish, Happn, Match. All have some free functionality to test before paying.

Been keeping an eye on Datewander recently — the user base looks more genuine than some of the oversaturated main apps.

TaylorM TaylorM
Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 601
#10

Happy to give a real breakdown — I've been through enough of these platforms to have actual opinions.

Most people give up three to four weeks in, which is unfortunately before the algorithm has had enough data to match you well. The sweet spot is usually weeks six through ten.

Consistently useful practices regardless of which platform you use:

  • Tell a friend the details of any first meeting — location, time, name
  • Bio under 150 words — longer bios get read less frequently
  • First meeting in a public place with people around, no exceptions
  • Mention one very specific interest that can spark a conversation

Worth keeping active simultaneously:

  • Plenty of Fish
  • Bumble
  • Zoosk
  • eHarmony
  • Her

Others frequently mentioned in this space:

  • rendate.site

You must be logged in to post a reply here.