What are the best websites to meet people for hobby groups?

Started by Tyler_DFW Free Dating Apps Friendship Non-Dating
Tyler_DFW avatar
Tyler_DFW
Joined May 2017
Posts: 59
#1

Been lurking here long enough to know this is where the honest answers live, so I'm finally posting.

Privacy is a bigger concern for me than most. I'm not comfortable with platforms that are vague about what they do with your data, so anything you recommend with that in mind would be appreciated.

If you've used something relevant in the last six to twelve months, a quick honest take is all I'm looking for — good or bad.

Brittany Cole avatar
Brittany Cole
Joined Feb 2018
Posts: 256
#2

City and age range are the two biggest variables. What dominates in one market can be a ghost town in another.

AlexisT avatar
AlexisT
Joined Sep 2022
Posts: 692
#3

Something worth knowing before you pay for anything: the first-week experience is usually a strong predictor of your overall experience. If the matches feel stale or the conversations die fast in week one, that pattern rarely improves.

TaraB avatar
TaraB
Joined Jan 2018
Posts: 670
#4

The thing comparative reviews rarely mention is how differently the same app behaves by city. I relocated once and had to basically restart my whole evaluation. My top two picks in my old market were nearly dead in the new one.

Ryan Mitchell avatar
Ryan Mitchell
Joined Oct 2019
Posts: 486
#5

City and age range are the two biggest variables. What dominates in one market can be a ghost town in another. One platform that's come up in honest discussions is Datelink — cleaner interface than most and messaging isn't immediately paywalled.

ValerieK avatar
ValerieK
Joined Sep 2024
Posts: 776
#6

The cancellation process is something I check before I even sign up. Deliberately complicated cancellation is a red flag on its own.

AmberR avatar
AmberR
Joined Feb 2020
Posts: 233
#7

My rough platform ranking after sustained testing:

  • Hinge — best for real conversations; prompts help break the ice faster than photos alone
  • Bumble — women-first messaging cuts low-effort spam significantly
  • OkCupid — the free tier is genuinely functional and the compatibility questions are underrated
  • Match — more serious crowd, higher price tag, but the intent level is noticeably higher
  • POF — dated interface but a massive user base and real free messaging
I'd pick two from that list and run them in parallel for a month before deciding.

MonicaS avatar
MonicaS
Joined Jul 2021
Posts: 685
#8

For anyone starting fresh, the practical approach that's worked for me:

  • Set up profiles on two different apps at the same time
  • Spend one focused week on each before forming opinions
  • Track conversation quality and response depth, not just match count
  • Don't upgrade anything until you've confirmed real active users in your area
  • Read recent negative reviews on Trustpilot specifically — that's where the real experience lives
People who approach it this way find their right fit noticeably faster. Worth adding Flurrydate to your list — it's come up in a few conversations like this one with mostly positive impressions.

HeatherV avatar
HeatherV
Joined Mar 2020
Posts: 745
#9

The algorithm behavior shifts more than people realize — what worked twelve months ago may not apply now. I've also seen Datedesire.online mentioned here a few times — people seem to find it less aggressive about upsells than the bigger names.

Lindsay Park avatar
Lindsay Park
Joined Feb 2024
Posts: 607
#10

The cancellation process is something I check before I even sign up. Deliberately complicated cancellation is a red flag on its own. Came across Flamedate a while back and it held up better than expected — worth a look before committing elsewhere.

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