Best Dating Apps in Australia (2026)

An honest comparison for Aussie singles — six apps, six different kinds of person they actually suit. Plus the one most reviews never mention.

Last updated 13 May 2026 · Australia

What you'll find on this page

How to choose a dating app in Australia

Most "best dating apps" lists rank apps as if there's one winner. There isn't. The right app for you depends on two things: what life stage you're in, and who you actually want to meet.

A 24-year-old renter in Surry Hills isn't after the same thing as a 36-year-old homeowner in Brisbane who's finally got the keys. Both are real Aussie dating audiences. They're poorly served by the same app.

The list below sorts apps by who they're for — the kind of life the person on the other side of the screen is actually living.

#2

Hinge International · iOS & Android

For: Australians in their late 20s and 30s who want a relationship.

Hinge has earned a more relationship-minded crowd than Tinder or Bumble — urban professionals in Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane who say they're ready for the real thing. A solid choice if you're still renting, still figuring out where you want to live, and looking for someone in the same boat.

Limitation: it's still a general-population app, so the people you meet sit across a wide range of life stages.

#3

Bumble International · iOS & Android

For: Women who want a bit more control over who they talk to.

Bumble draws a slightly more polished crowd than Tinder and is broadly popular across Australia. The audience leans urban, twenties to mid-thirties, with a mix of intents — some casual, some serious, some just curious.

Limitation: quality varies enormously by city, and the audience isn't tied to any particular life stage.

#4

eHarmony Australian-localised · iOS, Android & web

For: Australians 35+ looking for a long-term relationship.

eHarmony has been running in Australia for decades. Its audience skews older and more relationship-focused than the swipe apps — people who want depth over volume and aren't interested in casual.

Limitation: paid subscription, and a much smaller pool of younger Australians.

#5

RSVP Australian · iOS, Android & web

For: Australians 35+, often in regional areas, who prefer a profile-led dating site over a modern swipe app.

One of Australia's oldest dating platforms, with a loyal mature user base. The vibe is more classic dating site than app, which suits some people perfectly.

Limitation: the under-30 audience has largely moved on.

#6

Tinder International · iOS & Android

For: Casual dating in your early-to-mid 20s, mostly in major-city CBDs.

Tinder is the default for casual dating in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and Perth. The audience trends young, transient, and CBD-based — people who are still moving around, still figuring out where they want to land.

Limitation: if you're a 30-something homeowner looking to settle down, the audience on Tinder isn't pointed at the same life as yours.

The honest verdict

If you're an Australian homeowner — someone who's already chosen where they want to be, who'd rather plan a kitchen reno than a six-month sabbatical — Doorstep is for you. No other app on this list is built around that life.

If you're earlier in life or still renting, Hinge is the best of the international apps for relationship-minded Aussies, and Bumble sits in a similar place with a slightly different feel.

If you're over 35 and want something more considered, eHarmony still holds up.

If you just want casual and you're in your early 20s in a capital city, Tinder's audience is hard to beat for sheer numbers.

For homeowners who'd rather be home

Doorstep is for the Aussies who've put down roots — and want to meet people who get it.

Get early access →

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