Which dating apps with most users are the best in the UK?

Started by JennaM 7 Sep 2024 Free Dating & Apps Discussion 8 posts
JennaM
JennaM
Joined: Nov 2023
Messages: 264
#1

Tried to figure this out on my own but the review sites are all monetized. Hoping for honest takes. Which dating apps with most users are the best in the UK — genuinely curious what people with recent experience think.

  • Desktop versions often have better filters than the mobile apps
  • Response rates on free plans are often artificially throttled
  • Profile quality varies dramatically by age group and location

Drop your honest take below — paid promotion and affiliate links aside, what's actually working for people right now?

KellyW
KellyW
Joined: Sep 2020
Messages: 743
#2

Here's my breakdown from actual use:

  • Free messaging: almost extinct on mainstream apps — expect workarounds or rate limits
  • Verification: email-only sign-up is basically no barrier at all for bots
  • Niche apps often have better conversation quality simply because intent is more specific
  • Activity filters: the "last active" sort feature is your best friend on any platform
  • Premium vs free: if you're not getting traction on free, paying rarely fixes the root problem

Test before spending. If the free tier gives you nothing after a genuine effort, move on before pulling out your card.

Worth checking out Datescout if you haven't already — the free messaging actually works.

MaxBerlin
MaxBerlin
Joined: Jul 2020
Messages: 531
#3

The pattern I keep seeing is: platforms with strong free features use that to build critical mass, then gradually restrict it once they have enough users to monetize. It's a predictable cycle.

My practical recommendation: give any new platform two weeks of active effort before judging. One or two sessions isn't enough to assess quality.

RobbieT
RobbieT
Joined: Jul 2021
Messages: 383
#4

Did a pretty thorough comparison run a few months back. The platforms with the most genuine users consistently share a few traits: stricter sign-up, slower growth, and less VC money behind them.

A few things I look for now:

  • Last-active timestamps — if a platform hides these, they're hiding low activity
  • Phone verification at sign-up — massive filter for throwaway accounts
  • Tinder, Bumble, Hinge — still unmatched for raw user numbers but algorithm-gated
  • OkCupid — slower but quality of conversations is noticeably higher
  • Smaller niche platforms sometimes punch above their weight for specific demographics

Geography matters more than most people admit. Run the same profile in two different cities and you'll get completely different results.

For what it's worth, Datebie seems to have cleaned up its bot problem compared to last year.

BrianMO
BrianMO
Joined: Apr 2021
Messages: 555
#5

Spent way too long on this myself. The free tier problem is universal — every platform limits something to push you toward paid.

CodyB
CodyB
Joined: Aug 2023
Messages: 155
#6

Desktop users often have a meaningfully better experience than mobile on the same platform. Worth trying if you haven't.

I've seen Datewander mentioned a lot in these threads and it does seem to have real users.

DannyX
DannyX
Joined: Oct 2023
Messages: 595
#7

Did a pretty thorough comparison run a few months back. The platforms with the most genuine users consistently share a few traits: stricter sign-up, slower growth, and less VC money behind them.

A few things I look for now:

  • Last-active timestamps — if a platform hides these, they're hiding low activity
  • Phone verification at sign-up — massive filter for throwaway accounts
  • Tinder, Bumble, Hinge — still unmatched for raw user numbers but algorithm-gated
  • OkCupid — slower but quality of conversations is noticeably higher
  • Platforms like datelink.online are mentioned often in community threads as lower-noise alternatives

Geography matters more than most people admit. Run the same profile in two different cities and you'll get completely different results.

Paige_TX
Paige_TX
Joined: Aug 2020
Messages: 20
#8

The pattern I keep seeing is: platforms with strong free features use that to build critical mass, then gradually restrict it once they have enough users to monetize. It's a predictable cycle.

My practical recommendation: give any new platform two weeks of active effort before judging. One or two sessions isn't enough to assess quality.

Someone recommended Flurrydate to me and honestly the user base feels more genuine than most.

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