These are the 10 most common ways to find a partner

Love can happen almost anywhere, but these are the most common ways people end up meeting their long-term partners.

Dating apps

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Filtering through potential matches on Tinder, Hinge, or Bumble might be cliché, but statistically speaking, it’s still where most people meet. Sure, scrolling is draining, but at least you have endless immediate access to single people you’d probably never meet going about your daily life.

Mutual friends

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Meetings brokered by friends of friends have long been one of the safest and most traditional ways to meet a partner. Friends act as a natural vetting mechanism since they already know you and what you’re looking for. As such, they weed out many of the suspicious characters you might meet on a random blind date.

The workplace

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Working 40 hours a week, working on projects and eating lunch together is bound to ignite a flame if given the chance. Living the same day-to-day stress and working toward career goals allows you to develop a natural ease with one another. However, company HR policies might just create some secret danger.

Shared hobbies

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Signing up for a running group through your local running shop, recreational team sports, or pottery classes are great ways to meet someone organically. Already having something in common allows you to skip the small talk and awkwardness that can come with dating.

Nightlife spots

Lovely couple with fresh cocktails at bar counter
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Busy bars, packed concerts, and electrifying clubs have always been known to create romance. With loud music, a festive crowd, and alcohol flowing, you can easily walk up to someone you don’t know and strike up a conversation.

Academic settings

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College campuses, high schools, and those nights spent studying in the library until dawn are all great places to meet your significant other. College and high school age people tend to be on the same level in life and have the same interests. You grow close and these relationships often become long-lasting.

Religious communities

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Believe it or not, some singles are completely set on finding a partner who matches their specific spiritual beliefs and worldview. Churches, temple youth groups, and religious community events provide a safe, highly trusted environment for like-minded individuals to network over common morals and family values.

Volunteer work

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Volunteering with your local animal shelter, food bank or political campaign will immediately draw other compassionate, community-driven people to you. Striving together for a worthwhile, altruistic cause can speak volumes about someone’s character and values more quickly than a typical dinner and movie date.

Social media

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Direct messaging someone on Instagram, TikTok, or X may not seem like dating, but private conversations have become some of the most successful courtship methods out there. Messaging back and forth about common interests, responding to someone’s daily stories, or bonding over some obscure internet meme can help you cultivate a connection in real life without it feeling as transactional as meeting up on a dating app.

Everyday errands

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Every now and then, love happens unexpectedly while you’re out running errands. Whether it’s waiting in line at your favorite coffee shop, scrolling through grocery aisles, or sitting on a park bench at the dog park, these spontaneous meetings require good old face-to-face eye contact, a smile, and the courage to engage in quick small talk.

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