With dozens of dating apps competing for your attention — and your money — choosing the right one is harder than ever. We spent months testing the most popular options to bring you this definitive ranking for 2025.
Hinge has earned the top spot by doing everything its competitors do — but better. The profile system encourages real self-expression through prompts and voice notes. Conversations actually go somewhere.
Read full Hinge review →Best for: People aged 25–38 who want a serious relationship.
Still the most downloaded dating app worldwide. Its free tier has shrunk, but the user base is unmatched. If you're in a smaller city or want maximum exposure, Tinder is hard to skip.
Read full Tinder review →Best for: 18–28 year olds, casual daters, travelers.
Women message first — creating a noticeably different culture. Fewer unwanted messages, higher quality conversations, and a more serious user base overall.
Best for: Women who want control, men who want motivated matches.
Targets educated, career-focused singles. A personality test filters for compatibility early. Smaller user base, but more uniformly serious.
Best for: Professionals, 30+, ambitious people.
Connecting people since 1995 and still holding its own. User base skews older and more relationship-focused than newer apps.
Best for: 35+ singles seeking long-term relationships.
Compatibility questions match you with people whose answers align with yours. The free version is more useful than most apps at zero cost.
Sends a small number of curated matches each day. The anti-Tinder — designed for people who find swiping exhausting and prefer quality over quantity.
For most people in 2025, start with Hinge. If you want to maximize chances, add Tinder or Bumble alongside it. Test the free tiers first and only upgrade if you're consistently hitting limits.