Key facts
- AI chatbots are being used to help individuals with dating, including drafting messages and building profiles.
- Users are employing tools like ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Grok for dating assistance.
- Dating apps are incorporating AI features to suggest profiles, generate conversation starters, and provide feedback.
- Concerns exist about AI diminishing creativity and the capacity for forming genuine relationships.
- A Pew Research Center survey found that 53% of U.S. adults believe AI will worsen creativity, and half feel it will worsen meaningful relationship formation.
- Bumble is shifting towards AI-driven matchmaking, aiming to make connections feel more human.
Artificial intelligence chatbots are increasingly being adopted by individuals to navigate the complexities of modern dating, acting as digital Cyrano de Bergeracs to help craft messages, build profiles, and even interpret communications from potential partners.
Users like Marie Lansley, 36, are consulting AI tools such as ChatGPT and Claude to overcome challenges in initiating conversations on dating apps, viewing AI as a means to enhance efficiency in their romantic pursuits. Despite optimism about AI's potential, there is a prevailing sentiment that while technology can streamline the dating process, the essential element of human chemistry remains analog.
Dating apps themselves are integrating AI, with platforms like Tinder offering features that suggest tailored profiles and Hinge providing AI-powered conversation starters. Bumble has announced plans to move away from its signature swipe feature towards AI-driven matchmaking, with CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd stating the goal is to make technology foster more human connections.
However, this integration of AI into romance is met with a spectrum of reactions, ranging from excitement to skepticism. Dating coach Carey Gaynes notes the potential for AI to be a crutch, enabling users to employ a voice that isn't their own. Concerns are amplified by findings from a 2025 Pew Research Center survey, which indicated that a majority of U.S. adults believe AI will negatively impact creativity and the formation of meaningful relationships.
Some individuals, like Clara Sullivan, 22, draw a line, stating they would not engage with a potential partner whose messages were AI-generated, fearing it erodes independent thought and creativity. Others, such as Mason Naung, 25, see AI as useful for initial icebreakers but would consider AI-generated messages beyond that a 'red flag.' Conversely, some, like Dani Cohen, 27, see AI-written farewell messages as preferable to being 'ghosted,' viewing any tool that facilitates kinder communication as beneficial.
Despite reservations about 'outsourcing' love lives, the marriage of AI and the dating industry appears inevitable, with companies striving to balance technological assistance with the preservation of authentic human connection.



