
There’s a particular kind of exhaustion that doesn’t come from overwork or poor sleep. It lives in the thumb, in the endless scroll, the hollow “hey,” and the match that disappears before you’ve finished typing.
Dating app burnout is increasing as users become overwhelmed and disillusioned. Women, in particular, are logging off, and many of them are not coming back.
What the research says about swiping and mental health
A Forbes health survey found that 78 per cent of dating app users have reported burnout from app use and that figure doesn’t exist in isolation. If you’ve spent any time swiping on dating sites recently, that number probably doesn’t surprise you. Research has been pointing in this direction for a while.
Studies consistently link heavy dating app use to lower self-esteem, increased body dissatisfaction and higher rates of anxiety. The mechanics are straightforward enough. You present yourself for evaluation, you get accepted or rejected, often without explanation and you repeat this dozens of times a week. The psychological toll of that cycle accumulates faster than you might realise.
This isn’t a new problem, either. In 2017, a University of North Texas study found that Tinder users reported low self-worth and greater body shame than non-users. The swipe format, by design, reduces complex human judgement to a split-second visual judgement. Doing that repeatedly across months or years leaves a mark.
What makes it harder is the absence of closure. A job rejection usually comes with a reason, while a dating app match that goes silent offers nothing. That ambiguity, repeated often enough, starts to feel like a verdict.
Dating app burnout is hard to ignore
That emotional weight of burnout and mental exhaustion takes a toll beyond the apps. Women already carry a disproportionate share of mental and physical stress. Hormonal fluctuations, cycle-related symptoms and the family demands of professional life stack up in ways that are often invisible to others.
Adding the unpredictability and frequent disappointment of app-based dating to that mix is, for many, simply one thing too many. It starts to feel less like a romantic pursuit and more like unpaid emotional labour.
Why dating feels like a second job
Part of the problem is structural. Dating apps are built on engagement rather than outcomes. The more you scroll, the better the platform performs. Whether you actually find a compatible partner is almost beside the point.
Many people spend large chunks of time on apps and feel worse by the end. That experience is common. There’s curating a profile that feels authentic but also optimised. The opening messages need to be interesting enough to compete. The back-and-forth that fizzles without earning. Ghosting, once considered bad behaviour, has become so normalised that it barely registers anymore.
For career-focused women, the calculation starts to look grim. Time is finite, attention is a resource and the apps are not always generous with either.
What women are doing instead
The appetite for connection hasn’t disappeared, but the method has shifted. More women are turning to interest-based communities like running clubs, pottery classes, book groups and volunteer networks that offer connection in lower-stakes environments.
Many women are realising the benefits and value of platonic relationships rather than solely focusing on romantic ones. For example, Bumble BFF, which started as a side feature, has become a genuine tool for women seeking meaningful friendships, helping them expand their circles entirely outside of dating.
For those still interested in dating but wanting to avoid the apps, in-person dating events are becoming increasingly popular. These events are often well-organised and facilitated by a host that can make introductions, helping to break the ice and make genuine connections. A lot of these in-person dating events are often centred on a theme or activity, to help people via a shared interest.
Others are simply choosing to be offline for now to take a break from the pressure and exhaustion that the modern dating world brings.
That shift isn’t anti-love or anti-connection, but recalibration. Women are asking what their time is actually worth and finding that the apps, as they currently exist, often can’t justify the answer. The question isn’t about whether love is still worth pursuing, but whether the current tools are worth the cost of pursuing it.
A different kind of swipe
Dating apps are not going anywhere, but the relationship women have with them is clearly changing. What’s emerging is quieter and arguably more considered.
More women are done performing for an algorithm and starting to trust their own judgement about where to invest their energy. Whether that goes into apps, communities or simply their own lives is, at last, entirely their call.
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Lola Marks
Lola Marks is the Senior Editor at Body+Mind, specialising in mindfulness and holistic self-care.
She is passionate about inspiring readers to live an intentional and vibrant lifestyle.