Robyn Exton, Mook Phanpinit, Jessica Serviat
Robyn is the CEO & Founder of HER. Find her on Twitter.
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Robyn Exton, Mook Phanpinit, Jessica Serviat
Apr 21, 2026
Dating as an asexual person in 2026 looks a lot different than it did even a few years ago.
There’s greater visibility, more ace-friendly platforms, and a stronger sense of community, but that doesn’t mean dating is free from confusion or mismatched expectations.
Whether you’re aromantic, demiromantic, or exploring where you fit on the asexual spectrum, finding a partner who understands your boundaries and needs is possible.
Here’s how to navigate dating, communicate clearly, and build connection at your own pace.
Knowing and naming your orientation helps others see the real you.
For asexual people, being specific about romantic orientation, meaning who you’re romantically attracted to rather than sexually, can make a world of difference.
Including phrases like “biromantic ace open to emotional intimacy” or “demisexual and seeking romance, not sex” in a profile sets expectations upfront. It helps prevent misunderstandings later.
Apps like HER and other ace-friendly platforms let users choose orientation fields that honour the full spectrum of queer identity, so using these tools helps compatible matches find you faster.
The clearer you are about your goals, the easier it becomes to meet people who respect your rhythm and preferences.
The platform you use shapes your dating experience.
Ace-focused and queer-friendly apps are designed to honour nonsexual and mixed-orientation dynamics, something mainstream apps still miss.
Here’s how a few platforms compare:
| Platform | Focus | Why it’s ace-friendly |
| HER | Queer women & non-binary users | Built inside sapphic culture; inclusive of ace identities with detailed orientation options and community groups |
| AsexualCupid | Asexual-specific | Built for ace spectrum users seeking friendship or romance |
| AceSpace | Privacy-first ace dating | Profile privacy by default, active safety features |
| Taimi | Queer-inclusive | Customisable preference fields to signal ace identity |
Ace-friendly means more than tolerance. It means spaces that understand asexual experiences without making you explain them from scratch.
Your dating profile can double as a boundary tool. Use prompts to be transparent about affection, intimacy or pacing.
Examples:
Being upfront spares you mismatched expectations and saves energy for conversations that actually matter.
On HER, prompts make it easy to express comfort levels in your own words before the first chat even starts.
Consent isn’t just physical. It’s emotional too.
It means active, ongoing permission for all forms of closeness.
Setting boundaries should feel mutual, not apologetic.
Before a date, try simple check-ins: “Hand-holding and hugs are great for me; kissing isn’t.” Some use a stoplight system (green for yes, yellow for maybe, red for no) to communicate comfort zones.
These tools normalise consent as part of connection, not conflict.
Intimacy doesn’t have to mean sex.
Many aces build closeness through quiet comfort or shared rituals.
Nonsexual intimacy can look like:
Nonsexual intimacy means creating closeness in ways that don’t rely on sex.
Many users on HER share that affection, steady presence and emotional attunement are what make them feel most loved.
Not every dating app handles your data the same way.
Some prioritise privacy and consent more than others.
For example, AceSpace keeps profiles private by default, while some ad-based apps collect more user data.
| App | Privacy policy | Pricing notes | Safety features |
| AceSpace | Private by default | Free core features | Active mod team |
| HER | Customisable visibility controls | Free tier; paid upgrades | ID verification, robust reporting tools, community-led moderation |
| PURE | Minimal privacy | Gendered pricing | Limited moderation |
Always review how platforms store personal information and identity data before signing up.
HER’s design gives users direct control over how visible they want to be within the sapphic community.
Safety isn’t negotiable.
Choose platforms known for active moderation, verified profiles and transparent reporting.
Green flags:
Red flags:
HER consistently leads with community-rooted safety. The app’s moderation combines human review with queer-led policy insight. Ace users can express identity openly without fear of harassment.
Community makes everything easier, especially while navigating mixed orientations or ace stereotypes.
Look for:
Finding people who get it brings validation, humour and grounded advice when dating feels confusing.
Mixed-orientation relationships, where partners experience attraction differently, can absolutely work with clear communication and patience.
You might end up explaining asexuality more than once, or sharing articles that debunk myths. That’s okay, as long as it doesn’t turn into constant emotional labour.
Check in regularly, share resources and recognise when needs don’t align.
Compatibility isn’t about “fixing” orientation. It’s about mutual respect and realistic expectations.
Dating should never cost your well-being.
If something leaves you feeling invalidated, pressured or drained, take a step back.
Signs it’s time to pause include recurring boundary breaches or feeling like you have to “perform” attraction.
Having an exit plan helps. This could be a few trusted friends, an ace community to ground you or simply a break from apps.
Your comfort isn’t up for debate. It’s the baseline for any connection worth pursuing.
HER’s vibe-led culture encourages that balance between exploration and self-trust.
A sex-favourable asexual doesn’t feel sexual attraction but may enjoy sex as an activity. They can date sexual partners if boundaries and comfort are respected on both sides.
Share it when you feel ready, whether on your profile, through chat or early on in conversation. There’s no fixed timeline.
Say clearly what intimacy looks like for you. Keep it simple, honest and mutual.
Listen, validate and only ask questions if invited. Curiosity without judgment goes a long way.
Yes. Many aces experience romantic love or emotional closeness, and some enjoy sex contextually. Asexuality is about attraction, not capacity.
In short, dating as an asexual person in 2026 is about honesty, safety and self-understanding. With ace-aware spaces like HER, clear communication and steady community support, love and connection are completely within reach, whatever your rhythm.
Further reading on asexual dating and relationships:
Robyn Exton, Mook Phanpinit, Jessica Serviat
Robyn is the CEO & Founder of HER. Find her on Twitter.