The Best Dating Apps If You're Fitness-Obsessed

Want a partner who will log long runs with you on the reg? How about someone who can spot your deadlifts?

Fitness dating apps like Sweatt exist specifically for gym diehards, but there are also plenty of ways you can hack apps like Bumble to match you with more fitness-minded men or women.

In fact, Erika Ettin, founder of A Little Nudge, an online dating coaching service, doesn’t generally recommend super-niche apps unless not having a certain background or religion is a total deal-breaker. (Her take: Why seriously limit your prospects when you can make your interests clear via your profile?)

These fitness-friendly dating apps take the cake—er, protein shake—among single people who like to sweat on the reg:

datefit
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Datefit, which officially launched in late August and already has 20,000 downloads nationally, asks members to include their life goals, dietary preferences, fitness interests, and more. 

It also hosts events, like fitness cruises, and aims to cultivate a community via social media, says Steven Macecevic, Datefit’s CEO. “CrossFitters, runners, yogis, fitness competitors, and athletes are all a part of our community,” he says, as are aspiring exercisers. “We certainly don’t consider ourselves a ‘gym rat’ app.”

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If you seem to always catch the eye of the same sexy runner on your path, Happn may just be the ice-breaker you need. A sort of modern day “missed connections” app, Happn uses location and real-time data to allow users to find and reconnect with people who they’ve crossed paths with in everyday life. 

“A Happner’s timeline reflects their everyday activity, so they can find people who are as active as them,” says Eugenie Legendre, Happn’s international PR and communications manager. 

There’s also a new map feature so you zoom in on a gym, park, or sports event to check out fellow Happners who were there at the same time. 

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Sure, Bumble attracts all types—but photos of users hiking, fishing, or spending time outdoors abound on the app, says Alex Williamson, Bumble’s chief brand officer. 

Plus, using the app’s new “badge” feature, health-minded singles may be able to streamline their success by adding an active badge to their profile and keeping an eye out for mates who’ve done the same. The feature also allows users to indicate lifestyle choices like whether they work out, drink, or smoke, Williamson says.  

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What’s your dream yoga retreat? What are you currently training for? What trendy superfood can’t you live without? These are just some of the questions you can answer using OKCupid’s new Topics feature, which queries users on any number of subjects from travel to cooking to wellness, says an OKCupid spokesperson. 

Fun fact: Users’ profiles frequently mention running—10 times more than SoulCycle, for example, and seven more times than lifting. 

Including what you geek out over—be it WODs or boxing—in any mainstream dating profile is the best way to boost your chances of finding a like-minded match, says Ettin, who calls herself a “kettle-beller” in some profiles. “It gets people interested who know what that means,” she says.

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More like Athletic Greens meets barbell, but you get the idea. Though not exclusively for fitness junkies, Coffee Meets Bagel recently launched “CMB Experiences” to bring singles together in person, including at active events like its Run Date Festival in Asia.

The app is best known for limiting the number of matches you get a day to stave off swipe fatigue.

SWEATT Inc.
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Consider this app the OG of fitness dating apps: Launched in 2015, Sweatt has outlived some other apps who tried to get in the same game. (RIP “True Swolemate.”) 

The app prompts users to identify when they like to work out (early riser or up-all-nighter?), how many times a week they break a sweat, and what they actually do the most—be it CrossFIt, yoga or team sports—and matches singles accordingly. 

The glaring downside? Apparently, wannabe users have been sitting on the waitlist for months, and those who have successfully downloaded haven’t gotten many matches. 

From: Women’s Health US

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