The best dating sites and apps for women

It's a minefield out there, but these dating sites can help.
By
Leah Stodart
and
Joseph Green
 on 
Editors and writers independently select products unless marked Sponsored or Promoted. Sponsored content is a paid ad, while content marked Promoted is chosen by Ziff Davis leadership. We may earn an affiliate commission if you buy through our links. Promoted cards do not include input from individual authors.

Overview

PROMOTED
Best For Hooking Up

AdultFriendFinder

Jump to Details
Best For Proven Results

Match

Jump to Details
Best For Commitment

eharmony

Jump to Details
Best For Professionals

EliteSingles

Jump to Details
Best For Sexting

Tinder

Jump to Details
Best For Confident Women

Bumble

Jump to Details
See 1 More

Table of Contents

This content originally appeared on Mashable for a US audience and has been adapted for the UK audience.

The online world isn't always the friendliest of places for women, particularly when it comes to trolling and misogyny on social media. From Twitter reply guys, to other forms of online harassment, to straight up cyberstalking, letting women exist in peace seems to be a hard concept to grasp.

When it comes to dating apps specifically — where others often assume that a dating app profile means that one is willfully subjecting themselves to creepy comments — the chance of women enduring such unsettling experiences feels doubled. The onslaught of men grasping at straws for attention with messages saying "think they saw you somewhere" or requesting nudes in their opening line is an online dating specialty.

Is it easier to shoot your shot by simply using a hot selfie on your Instagram story as bait for your crush? That's a classic tactic that'll never die. But unless you and said crush are already in some sort of flirtationship and already follow each other on social media, finding love, a hookup, or someone to grab a drink with could happen a lot faster with the right dating app (as opposed to waiting to meet someone at work or agreeing to a blind date).

This means not deleting and re-downloading Tinder after every breakup or every time you ghost (or get ghosted by) your current entanglement. Tinder can truly be a great place to meet genuine people who are open to getting serious, to find a reliable friend with benefits, or to get a good-old-fashioned confidence boost from a mutual right swipe. But if you're frustrated with horny users disguising themselves as relationship seekers or relationship seekers who can't handle it when you say you're just looking for a hookup, opting for a dating site more finely-tuned to what you're looking for means you'll spend less time dealing with people who aren't looking for the same thing. 

Maybe you can't stand starting every conversation from scratch. Maybe your biggest fear is ending up on a date with someone who doesn't care about cats. Instead of a lazy bio, dating apps that delve into someone's hobbies, favourite movies, career goals, or political views before even talking to them opens up a wealth of clever ice breakers, and ensures that you aren't going into things blindly. 

What are dating apps doing to make dating safer?

Meeting someone from the internet in person for the first time is nerve-wracking for anyone. But for women, it can dredge up the same fear that occurs when walking alone past a big group of men. 

Match Group is making strides toward a safer dating experience: Tinder was the first to unveil new features coming out of its partnership with Noonlight, a safety app that tracks the location of users and notifies authorities if there are concerns. Before heading out on a date, Tinder users can log info about where they're going and who they're meeting, as well as hit a panic button to alert authorities if there's an emergency.

Match Group plans to roll out the same features for its other apps, like Hinge and OkCupid, later. In March 2021, Tinder announced plans to let users run a background check on their matches.

Should you use free dating apps?

There are plenty of free dating sites and apps out there, and the likes of Tinder and Hinge are popular options with massive networks of users. You can easily enter the online dating game without spending anything, but you get what you pay for with dating sites and apps.

For the best experience with the greatest possibility of finding exactly what you're looking for, you are probably going to need to cough up some cash. The best dating sites don't come cheap, and whilst you can still find a hookup with a free app, you should upgrade is you're looking for compatibility tests, chat rooms, videos, and a greater level of control.

What are the best dating sites for women?

Whether you're looking for a fun time or your next long-term relationship, we have picked out a wide range of apps and sites for different types of daters. So whatever you're looking for, we have you covered with this guide.

We have done the tough stuff, looked at all the facts and figures, and worked out which sites are the best options for every single type of woman out there. We have narrowed it down to the best sites, and reviewed the likes of eharmony, Match, Lumen, and AdultFriendFinder for your consideration.

These are the best dating sites for women in 2025.

Details

Match logo

Match

Best For Proven Results

The Good & The Bad

  • Large dating pool
  • Cool new features
  • Proven success
  • Not the cheapest

Why We Like It

Match has been around since 1995 and is one of the most trusted of the dating sites — for good reason. Its long history gives it a strong standing in the world of online dating and the site covers a huge area, servicing 24 different countries in 15 different languages.

Match caters to a wide variety of daters, from people looking for casual dating to those seeking long-term relationships. Though they are the oldest of the dating sites, they've kept up with the times and recently added a mobile platform with features like user stories. They like to share success stories of couples who've met on Match.

Details

eharmony logo

eharmony

Best For Commitment

The Good & The Bad

  • Offers a 3-month guarantee
  • For the marriage-minded, it has a great track record
  • Taking a long quiz can be tedious if you're busy
  • Free membership is very limited

Why We Like It

Dating giant eharmony is the site to go to when you're really serious about finding a connection. Unlike some of the other websites which cater to both serious and casual daters, eharmony focuses on people seeking long-term relationships. eharmony even makes a guarantee that if you're not satisfied in 3 months, you'll get 3 months free. 

Instead of the user searching for potential matches using their own criteria, eharmony presents their suggestions on the lengthy and comprehensive personality quiz members take when signing up. eharmony caters to people of a variety of age, demographics, and backgrounds, and also has options for local dating. One thing's for sure: people on eharmony aren't looking for a hook-up. Success stories for eharmony are shared on the site.

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Great for women looking for a partner in the same job field
  • More mature user base than competitors
  • Very specific age group target
  • Might get suggestions that don't match your filters
  • Easy for users to lie about wages

Why We Like It

A difference in work ethic and professional schedules can really throw a spanner into even the most head-over-heels relationships. For those unwilling to budge when it comes to their partner's educational values and career goals, EliteSingles attempts to offer more specificity where eharmony and Match leave off. 

Its mature user base pays a steep subscription fee to use the site each month — a clue that EliteSingles is targeted toward more established folks with a disposable income. Rather than being thrown into an endless pool of profiles, EliteSingles attempts to match you through 29 algorithms rooted in the Five Factor Personality Test. The site is on the hunt for singles to complement your attachment style, selfishness, and more stuff that you should try to be honest about. The boring stuff is broken up by chill questions like "Do you like sleeping with the window open?" and "Which of these foods would you like the best?"

Though you can technically filter potential matches by profession (for example, a teacher looking to date another teacher), it’s difficult for any dating site to track down every single person lying about their job or how much money they make. 

Details

Tinder logo

Tinder

Best For Sexting

The Good & The Bad

  • Easy and instantaneous
  • Massive user base, even in small towns
  • People looking for hookups will probably say so in their bio
  • Might have to pay more if you're 30+
  • Premium pricing is hard to pin down

Why We Like It

Love it or hate it — if you're thinking of dating apps, you're thinking of Tinder. They pioneered the now-ubiquitous swiping function, revolutionising the world of online dating and boasting 1.6 billion swipes per day. What started out as strictly a hookup app has turned into one of the biggest matchmakers in the world.

Tinder is also a pioneer of dating app safety. Emergency features like a panic button and anti-catfishing technology were among the first, and more recently, the company announced that users will soon be able to run background checks on matches.

Tinder may not want to advertise as such, but we all know what it's mostly used for. You're quite literally deciding if you want to interact with someone based on nothing but profile pictures and a quote from The Office, so yeah, you can see how getting laid would be the main goal of most users. But hey — we all know those couples who met on Tinder and have been together for years. It's fast, easy, and if there's one app that even the shyest, most skeptical people will be on, it's Tinder. 

Details

Bumble logo

Bumble

Best For Confident Women

The Good & The Bad

  • Only women can message first
  • Eliminates "dead" matches
  • Bumble Boost lets you rematch with an expired match
  • Time limit could be too high-pressure for some
  • You'll see a lot of the same people as Tinder

Why We Like It

In an attempt to correct one of the common complaints of dating apps — that women get spammed with loads of creepy messages — women are required to message first with Bumble. It pushes some women out of their comfort zone, but like Tinder, you'll at least know that someone also swiped right on you before making a move. It also takes the pressure off of dudes who feel like they need to start the conversation every time. (For same-sex matches, either party can break the ice.) 

Matches expire after 24 hours so you can't agonise over that opening line for too long, and your match list won't be filled with people you forgot you matched with 57 weeks ago. This is clearly not the ideal setup for someone who wants to sit back and wait for the algorithm to have five hotties waiting each time the app is opened.

You'll see pictures and short bios of potential matches in your area and can swipe depending on whether you're interested. It's a pretty close mock of Tinder, except for the fact that Bumble relieves the anxiety of accidentally swiping left on a hottie by letting you backtrack.

Details

Leah Stodart
Leah Stodart
Senior Shopping Reporter

Leah Stodart is a Philadelphia-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable where she covers essential home tech like vacuums and TVs as well as sustainable swaps and travel. Her ever-growing experience in these categories comes in clutch when making recommendations on how to spend your money during shopping holidays like Black Friday, which Leah has been covering for Mashable since 2017.

The robot vacuum beat in particular has cemented itself as Leah's main ~thing~ across the past few years. Since 2019, her expertise has been perpetually bolstered by the meticulous eye she keeps on robot vacuum deals and new releases, but more importantly, her hands-on experience with more than 25 robot vacuums tested in her own home. (This number has probably gone up by the time you're reading this.) That at-home testing is standardized through Mashable's robot testing guide — a granular scoring rubric for assessing all aspects of owning and using a robot vacuum on the daily — that Leah created herself.

Photo of Joseph Green
Joseph Green
Global Shopping Editor

Joseph Green is the Global Shopping Editor for Mashable. He covers VPNs, headphones, fitness gear, dating sites, streaming, and shopping events like Black Friday and Prime Day.

Joseph is also Executive Editor of Mashable's sister site, AskMen.


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