Robyn Exton, Jill O'Sullivan, Mook Phanpinit
Robyn is the CEO & Founder of HER. Find her on Twitter.
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Robyn Exton, Jill O'Sullivan, Mook Phanpinit
Mar 06, 2026
Meeting other bisexual people for dating doesn’t have to be complicated. A mix of smart online moves and low-pressure real-life spaces opens options fast. About half of lesbian, gay, and bisexual adults have tried online dating, according to Pew Research, so bi folks are very much on the apps already. Start where people actually are, then layer in events, groups, and meetups that make connections natural, safe, and judgment-free. This guide shares eight practical ways to meet bisexual people. Plus safety tips, key definitions, and HER’s best community tools.
HER is built for sapphics, trans, & nonbinary folks who want dating and community to feel organic, safe, and real. You can show your identity with Pride Pins and customizable labels, filter for bisexual matches, and use Incognito Mode when you want to browse quietly. Location-based matching makes it easy to meet nearby bi users, while queer-friendly communities and event listings help connections unfold without pressure. If you’re bi and crave emotionally fluent conversations and low-stakes hangs, this ecosystem is your home base. Explore HER’s bisexual features and community perks on the HER site.
Bisexual-focused apps are dating platforms designed for bi and bi-curious users. They often include orientation-first filters, open-minded community forums, and low barriers to messaging, which can be ideal if you’re tired of explaining what bisexuality is or fielding awkward questions.
Here are a few real-world standouts:
Take a quick look at pros and cons:
| What’s great | What to watch for |
| Targeted matches who “get it” | Smaller user pools in some areas |
| Less fetishization, more community feel | Occasional app bugs or slow rollouts |
| Often free matching/messaging | Ads or paid add-ons can pop up |
Queer women’s apps are built for women, nonbinary, and trans sapphics. These are spaces where safety, consent, and identity are centered. Features like orientation filters, bisexual badges, event listings, and friend-first vibes make these platforms an easy “yes” if you want more than swipes. HER leads here with moderated communities, IRL and online meetups, and tools that encourage conversation over performative profiles. If you’re a bisexual woman or nonbinary dater, these apps tend to cut the noise and boost meaningful connections, without the fetishization or explaining.
Mainstream inclusive apps (like Tinder and OkCupid) give you massive reach with gender and orientation options to help surface bisexual matches. Tinder’s scale can be great, but it comes with more noise and the chance of bots or bi-phobic encounters. Strong filters and reporting help, but stay alert. OkCupid has long championed inclusive identity and orientation prompts, which can make profiles feel more honest and specific.
Verification on dating apps means confirming someone’s identity (often via live photo or ID) to cut down on catfishing and fake profiles. If a profile won’t verify or dodges basic questions, trust your gut.
Quick definitions:
A sapphic meetup is a recurring, in-person gathering for queer people to socialize, swap resources, and build community. Honestly? This is arguably the chillest way to meet bi people without forced small talk.
Here’s how to plug in:
Bonus: offline spaces make it harder to catfish because you’re meeting face-to-face, which many daters cite as a major relief after heavy app use.
Pride parades, queer film fests, bookstore readings, and low-key mixers are electric, welcoming spaces where bisexual people show up proudly.
To actually meet folks:
These are classic queer events for bisexuals where friends, dates, and community all happen at once.
Interest-based groups like sports leagues, pottery classes, queer climbing nights, and sapphic book clubs let you connect over a shared passion instead of only an orientation label. Look for LGBTQ+-friendly or “out” spaces in descriptions, and prioritize activities where you’ll actually talk (crafts, reading groups, rec sports). These connection-first settings curb pressure, surface real compatibility, and naturally lead to “want to grab a coffee after?” moments.
Subreddits are topic-based forums on Reddit; r/bisexual is a large, supportive space to trade advice, swap stories, and ask city-specific questions before you dive into dating. Start with conversation-first posts, then move to meetups if it feels mutual. People often share which bisexual dating apps feel safest or most active in their area. Reading a few threads can save you weeks of trial and error.
More dating apps and LGBTQ+ orgs now host casual mixers, game nights, speed-friending, and coffee hangs with no pressure to pair off. Sign up for event notifications and RSVP early; these rooms blend the safety of app moderation with the warmth of IRL context.
Use apps with verification and reporting tools, meet in public spots, and tell a friend your plan; offline meetups and moderated events add extra safety and context.
Share your needs and limits early and kindly, like what you’re looking for, pace, and sexual health preferences. Then check in again after a few dates.
Absolutely! Plenty of people land on bi identity in adulthood; exploration at any age is valid and normal.
Search LGBTQ+ centers and queer bookstores, browse app event tabs, and peek at r/bisexual for local recs and safety tips.
Mostly friendly chats with the occasional mismatch; strong safety tools and clear profiles make the experience smoother and more fun.
Robyn Exton, Jill O'Sullivan, Mook Phanpinit
Robyn is the CEO & Founder of HER. Find her on Twitter.