Tinder's predictions for dating in 2026

Singles are seeking help from friends — and AI.
 By 
Anna Iovine
 on 
tinder logo with robotic hand looming above
Credit: Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto via Getty Images

While dating apps have leaned into AI in 2025, daters longed to meet potential partners in person. The apps are no longer novel, and users are complaining that they're getting worse. Singles are tired of the mixed signals, and while young adults are afraid of being cringe, they also seem to yearn for emotional availability.

This brings us to Tinder's predictions for 2026 dating trends, or its "Year in Swipe" report. Last year, the dating app thought that its users would be "micro-connecting" and intentional this year. What about the next 12 months?

Daters will be up front about what they're looking for

Tinder calls this "clear-coding." Not only do daters know what they want, but they want it to be known. Sixty-four percent of 4,000 young singles (18-25) surveyed told Tinder that emotional honesty is "what dating needs most," while 60 percent are calling for clearer communication around intentions. These singles reside in the U.S., UK, Canada, and Australia, and were surveyed between October and November 2025.


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Being apolitical is still out

For the last few years — at least since lockdown and the subsequent U.S. elections — singles have cared more and more about a potential partner's politics. That trend isn't stopping now with what Tinder calls "hot-take dating." Forty-one percent of young singles wouldn't date someone with opposite political views.

That being said, 46 percent would still consider it — but that breaks down to only 35 percent of women and 60 percent of men. (Coffee Meets Bagel found the same thing last year: More women refused to date someone with differing political views than men.)

Tinder also identified some principle-based dealbreakers, such as racial justice (a dealbreaker for 37 percent of daters) and LGBTQ rights (32 percent). Meanwhile, 36 percent consider "family values" as a dealbreaker.

The group chat will be the best matchmaker

Tinder has been betting on friends helping each other date, like with Double Date Mode — and 37 percent of young singles plan to go on group or double dates in 2026. Tinder also reported that 42 percent of young singles said that friends influence their dating life.

Single friends are also looking at their partnered ones for inspo: 34 percent of singles said their friends' relationships give them hope for the future of dating.

Please be emotionally available

Since the onset of COVID, which really put life into perspective for many people during lockdown, dating experts have told Mashable that singles are becoming more intentional about dating. Now, nearly six years on, that hasn't changed: 56 percent of daters surveyed by Tinder said that honest conversations matter most. Forty-five percent want more empathy after rejection.

Daters aren't afraid to use AI

This one isn't an official trend from Tinder's report, but these statistics caught our eye: 76 percent said they'd use AI in their dating journey. Suggesting a date seems the most popular way to use it (39 percent), followed by selecting their best photos and providing bio prompts (both 28 percent).

This aligns with what Match observed earlier this year, that the number of singles using AI to date has soared 300 percent from last year.

These trends seem to build upon what daters and experts have been saying for the past few years, which shows consistency in what daters (or at least, the ones that answer these surveys) want. And while daters have expressed frustration to Mashable this year, this survey suggests they haven't given up. The top word daters used to describe dating in 2026? "Hopeful."

UPDATE: Dec. 3, 2025, 9:04 a.m. EST This article was updated to add survey information.

Topics Tinder

anna iovine, a white woman with curly chin-length brown hair, smiles at the camera
Anna Iovine
Associate Editor, Features

Anna Iovine is the associate editor of features at Mashable. Previously, as the sex and relationships reporter, she covered topics ranging from dating apps to pelvic pain. Before Mashable, Anna was a social editor at VICE and freelanced for publications such as Slate and the Columbia Journalism Review. Follow her on Bluesky.

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