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Nearly half of U.S. singles distrust AI in dating, Match survey finds

BitcoinWorld Nearly half of U.S. singles distrust AI in dating, Match survey finds Dating app giant Match Group — which owns platforms including Tinder, Hinge, and OkCupid — has released surv

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 18, 2026
4 min read
NEWS
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BitcoinWorldNearly half of U.S. singles distrust AI in dating, Match survey finds

Dating app giant Match Group — which owns platforms including Tinder, Hinge, and OkCupid — has released survey results that highlight a deep ambivalence among U.S. singles toward artificial intelligence in romantic contexts. The study, which polled 1,000 people aged 18 to 39, found that 47% of singles hold a negative view of AI’s involvement in dating. The findings arrive as the industry increasingly invests in AI-powered features, raising questions about how much technology users are willing to accept in their search for connection.

What singles actually dislike about AI in dating

The survey reveals that opposition to AI varies significantly depending on its application. About 40% of singles said they would refuse to date someone who uses an AI companion app, with that figure rising to 51% among women aged 18 to 24. However, only 12% of respondents in that age group reported using a companion app in the past three months, and only about a third of those users said they were seeking genuine emotional connections with chatbots.

Match Group noted a “near-universal” disapproval of the concept of dating an AI entity outright — similar to the premise of the film “Her.” Yet the same respondents were not entirely closed to AI assistance. Roughly 64% said they could see how AI might help them in their dating journey, particularly with tasks like improving profile text, selecting photos, or keeping conversations flowing.

Industry-wide AI experimentation continues

Dating apps across the sector are racing to integrate AI tools. Bumble introduced a dating assistant named Bee, while Tinder has slowed hiring to allocate more resources to AI development. Hinge’s former CEO stepped down last year to launch a more AI-focused dating app. The survey’s timing is notable: every major dating app already uses some form of matching algorithm, but the new wave of generative AI features goes further, actively shaping how users present themselves and communicate.

Match’s own blog post summarizing the findings offered a clear takeaway for developers: “Ask singles what they want from AI in dating, and the answer is pretty consistent: help with the hard parts, but hands off for the human parts.” The company emphasized that users are willing to use AI for practical support, but want the actual emotional connection to remain authentically human.

Why this matters for the future of dating apps

The survey serves as a cautionary signal for dating app companies pushing aggressive AI adoption. Bumble founder Whitney Wolfe Herd recently suggested a future where users’ personal bots could date other users’ bots — a concept that the survey data suggests would face significant consumer resistance. While meeting a partner online has become socially normal, the idea of bots orchestrating introductions remains far from accepted.

For the industry, the challenge is clear: deploy AI in ways that feel supportive rather than intrusive. Users want help with the logistical friction of dating — crafting a better profile, breaking the ice, keeping a conversation alive — but they do not want technology to replace the genuine human interaction that dating is ultimately about.

Conclusion

Match Group’s survey underscores a critical tension in the dating app industry: users are open to AI assistance but deeply wary of AI replacing human connection. As companies continue to invest in AI features, the data suggests that success will depend on maintaining a clear boundary between helpful tools and inauthentic automation. The message from singles is consistent: help with the hard parts, but keep the human parts human.

FAQs

Q1: What percentage of U.S. singles view AI negatively in dating?According to Match Group’s survey of 1,000 people aged 18 to 39, 47% of singles have a negative view of AI’s use in romantic contexts.

Q2: Are singles completely opposed to AI in dating apps?No. While 47% have a negative view, 64% of respondents said they could see how AI might help them in their dating journey, particularly with profile optimization and conversation starters.

Q3: What specific AI features do dating apps currently offer?Major apps are introducing AI tools that help users improve their profiles, select photos, and generate conversation prompts. Bumble launched an assistant called Bee, and Tinder has increased AI investment significantly.

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