Dating Safety
Online dating is safe for most people most of the time, and the exceptions follow patterns you can learn in ten minutes. This page is the ten minutes: how to meet someone from an app without taking dumb risks, and how to recognize a romance scam while it is still free.
Before you meet anyone in person
- Video call first. A short call confirms the person matches the photos and kills most catfish on the spot. Bumble and Hinge include free in-app calls; use them before giving out your number.
- Meet in public, stay in public. Coffee shops, busy restaurants, daylight. The first meeting is for verifying a stranger, not for privacy.
- Tell someone. Share who, where, and when with a friend, and check in after. Location sharing for the evening costs nothing.
- Control your own ride. Arrive and leave on your own transportation. Never depend on a stranger to get home.
- Keep your address private until trust is earned across multiple meetings.
Romance scam warning signs
Romance scams are among the costliest consumer frauds the Federal Trade Commission tracks, and they follow a script. Treat each of these as a red flag; two together mean walk away:
- They cannot ever meet or video call. Deployed military, offshore work, endless excuses. Real people can get on camera.
- They push off the app fast. Scammers move to text or chat apps quickly so the platform cannot see or ban what comes next.
- Affection arrives implausibly fast. Love-bombing in week one from someone you have never met is technique, not chemistry.
- Money enters the story. An emergency, a customs fee, a can't-miss investment (often crypto). Any request for money, gift cards, wire transfers, or crypto from someone you have not met in person is a scam. No exceptions.
- They coach you toward secrecy ("don't tell your family, they won't understand"). Isolation is part of the script.
A reverse image search of profile photos catches many fakes early, and a profile that disappears and reappears under a new name has answered your question for you.
If it happens: report it
- FTC: reportfraud.ftc.gov, plus the FTC's dating-scam guidance at consumer.ftc.gov.
- FBI: ic3.gov for internet crime, including romance and investment fraud.
- The platform: report and block in-app. It protects the next person and creates a record.
- Your bank, immediately, if any money moved. Speed matters more than embarrassment, and there is nothing to be embarrassed about; these operations are professional.
If a relationship turns controlling or abusive
The National Domestic Violence Hotline is free, confidential, and available 24/7 at thehotline.org or 1-800-799-7233.
DateNorth is an information site for adults 18 and over. We review apps and publish safety guidance; we do not operate a dating service.