How to Stay Safe on Dating Apps in 2026
Dating apps have introduced millions of people to genuine relationships, and they've also introduced millions to scammers, catfish, and dangerous individuals. The rules for staying safe haven't changed much, but the threats have evolved. Here's a practical guide to protecting yourself.
1. Never share personal details early
Your full name, home address, workplace, and daily routine are all valuable to bad actors. Keep conversations on the app until you've established genuine trust. Don't move to WhatsApp or Telegram immediately when asked. Be careful with your full surname: combined with your city and employer, it provides enough information to locate you, contact your workplace, or build a social engineering profile.
2. Always video call before investing emotionally
A five-minute video call before your first date costs nothing. It confirms you're talking to a real person who looks like their photos. Insist on this regardless of how well the conversation is going. If they refuse, that's your answer. Watch the video carefully. Look for signs of pre-recorded video, someone reading from a script off-screen, or a mismatch between voice and appearance.
3. Meet in public places, every time
For first meetings and several dates after, always choose a busy, public location. A café, restaurant, or bar in a part of town you know. Never agree to be picked up from your home for a first date. Drive yourself or use public transport. Have your own way home that doesn't depend on the other person.
4. Tell a trusted person where you're going
Before any first meeting, tell a friend or family member: who you're meeting, where, and when you expect to be back. Share the person's profile: a screenshot or their name and photo. Set a check-in time. This takes 60 seconds and provides a significant safety net. Consider sharing your live location with a friend during the date via Google Maps or WhatsApp.
5. Trust your instincts, they're usually right
If something feels off, it probably is. If a conversation makes you uncomfortable, gives you an uneasy feeling, or something doesn't add up, that's worth paying attention to. You don't need to explain yourself or prove something is wrong before ending contact. 'I have a bad feeling' is a completely valid reason to stop communicating with someone.
6. Check photos before you get emotionally invested
The best time to check whether a profile is genuine is before you've developed feelings. Run a reverse image search and CatfishTracker analysis early, ideally before your first real conversation. It takes under two minutes. Catching a fake profile at this stage costs you nothing. Catching it after three months of emotional investment is much harder.
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7. Recognise red flags and act on them
Refusal to video call, requests for money, inconsistent stories, moving too fast emotionally, avoiding in-person meetings. These are all documented warning signs. Don't rationalise them. The sunk cost fallacy, feeling like you've invested too much to walk away, is exactly what scammers rely on.
Write down early details people share with you. Inconsistencies are easier to spot when you have a record of what was said.
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