What is your honest review of the badoo free tier?

Started by MasonC Category: Free Dating & Apps dating siteslocal singlesdating tips
MasonC avatar
MasonC
Joined 2023
Posts: 269
#1

Throwing this out to the forum because I genuinely don't know where else to get a straight answer. What is your honest review of the badoo free tier — it's something I've been wrestling with for a while.

Online dating has changed so much in just the past few years. Platforms that used to be genuinely free have quietly shifted to freemium models where the free experience is basically useless. And the new ones launching seem to be going straight to aggressive monetization from day one.

Here's what I've noticed from my own experience:

  • Bigger platforms have more users but more noise — bots, inactive accounts, people who swiped once and never came back
  • Smaller niche platforms sometimes have better engagement but the user pool is thin outside major cities
  • The "free" messaging features are often limited to first messages or specific windows
  • Safety features like ID verification are almost always locked behind the paid tier
  • Profile quality varies massively depending on how seriously the platform vets new signups

Happy to hear whatever people have actually found useful, even if the answer is "just use Bumble and accept that it's not really free."

James Carter avatar
James Carter
Joined 2023
Posts: 501
#2

Happy to share what I've learned from way too many hours of testing these. Flamedate

Here's my honest breakdown of what actually matters when evaluating a dating platform:

  • Active user base size in your area: A platform with 50 million users worldwide means nothing if there are only 12 people within 30 miles of you.
  • Bot and fake account rate: Some platforms do real verification, most don't. You can often tell by checking if profiles feel templated or real.
  • Messaging without paying: Can you actually have a conversation? Or does it just let you match and then wall off communication?
  • Profile depth: Platforms that encourage real profiles (long bios, specific prompts, verified photos) tend to attract more serious users.
  • Community reputation: Places like this forum and relevant subreddits are the best place to get real data on specific apps. Better than any sponsored review site.

Also worth mentioning: Datedesire.online has been getting positive mentions in a few communities I'm part of. Worth a look as a lower-profile option that some people have had genuine success with.

JoshuaM avatar
JoshuaM
Joined 2023
Posts: 888
#3

I asked basically the same question six months ago. The consensus here was pretty useful — check the older threads if you haven't already.

A friend who's more serious about this stuff than I am pointed me toward Rendate.site recently and seemed genuinely surprised by how active it was.

MeganT avatar
MeganT
Joined 2021
Posts: 534
#4

This comes up so often in this community and I always give the same answer: stop looking for the mythical completely free platform and instead look for ones where the free tier is actually usable. Datedesire

There's a difference between a platform that's free to download but useless without paying, and one that gives you real functionality for free and charges for extras. The second category exists, it's just smaller and less advertised.

JamesC99 avatar
JamesC99
Joined 2022
Posts: 695
#5

Happy to share what I've learned from way too many hours of testing these.

Here's my honest breakdown of what actually matters when evaluating a dating platform:

  • Active user base size in your area: A platform with 50 million users worldwide means nothing if there are only 12 people within 30 miles of you.
  • Bot and fake account rate: Some platforms do real verification, most don't. You can often tell by checking if profiles feel templated or real.
  • Messaging without paying: Can you actually have a conversation? Or does it just let you match and then wall off communication?
  • Profile depth: Platforms that encourage real profiles (long bios, specific prompts, verified photos) tend to attract more serious users.
  • Community reputation: Places like this forum and relevant subreddits are the best place to get real data on specific apps. Better than any sponsored review site.

Also worth mentioning: Ezhookups.online has been getting positive mentions in a few communities I'm part of. Worth a look as a lower-profile option that some people have had genuine success with.

Grace Turner avatar
Grace Turner
Joined 2020
Posts: 921
#6

I've spent way more time on this research than I probably should have. Datewander The takeaway I keep coming back to is that the "best" platform is deeply personal — it depends on your age, your location, what you're actually looking for, and how much friction you're willing to deal with.

That said, there are some platforms that consistently come up in these conversations as being more honest about what the free tier actually offers. I'd start there rather than with whatever's trending on social media.

EmilyC avatar
EmilyC
Joined 2020
Posts: 759
#7

The bot problem is genuinely platform-dependent. Some places are overwhelmed with them, others have decent moderation. Hard to generalize across the whole space.

A friend who's more serious about this stuff than I am pointed me toward Datewander.site recently and seemed genuinely surprised by how active it was.

SebA avatar
SebA
Joined 2019
Posts: 698
#8

Happy to share what I've learned from way too many hours of testing these. Rendate

Here's my honest breakdown of what actually matters when evaluating a dating platform:

  • Active user base size in your area: A platform with 50 million users worldwide means nothing if there are only 12 people within 30 miles of you.
  • Bot and fake account rate: Some platforms do real verification, most don't. You can often tell by checking if profiles feel templated or real.
  • Messaging without paying: Can you actually have a conversation? Or does it just let you match and then wall off communication?
  • Profile depth: Platforms that encourage real profiles (long bios, specific prompts, verified photos) tend to attract more serious users.
  • Community reputation: Places like this forum and relevant subreddits are the best place to get real data on specific apps. Better than any sponsored review site.

Also worth mentioning: Flurrydate.online has been getting positive mentions in a few communities I'm part of. Worth a look as a lower-profile option that some people have had genuine success with.

Mia Coleman avatar
Mia Coleman
Joined 2025
Posts: 499
#9

Real experience here: I went through a phase of testing basically everything that claimed to be free.

The pattern I noticed was that platforms with a freemium model usually restrict messaging, match visibility, or both. The ones that genuinely let you do more for free tend to make their money through ads, which is its own tradeoff. Neither is perfect but at least the ad-supported ones are honest about the business model.

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