89%
🔍 check social media before a first date
84%
🎭 have been catfished or lied to on apps
57%
🛡️ say ID verification should be standard

GuyID Dating Safety Survey, 2026

📝

What Does Their Dating Bio Actually Reveal?

Answer 8 questions about their bio. Get your analysis in 60 seconds.

x
8 questions0% complete
📏

How much effort did they put into their bio?

1/8
🎯

Do they state what they're looking for?

2/8
🚫

Is there negativity in their bio?

3/8
💔

Do they mention exes or past relationships?

4/8

Can you verify the claims in their bio?

5/8
🔥

Is there sexual content or innuendo in their bio?

6/8
💎

What lifestyle does their bio project?

7/8
📲

Does their bio push you off the dating app quickly?

8/8
🔒 Private & anonymous Results in 60 seconds
Research by
Ravi Shankar
Ravi Shankar
Founder, GuyID · Dating Safety Researcher · 13+ Years in Data Analytics

Methodology: This risk assessment is based on behavioral patterns documented across dating safety research, FTC romance scam reports, and IC3 cybercrime data. Scoring weights reflect frequency and severity of reported incidents.

Last updated: March 2026

What Dating Bios Reveal About Someone's Intentions

A dating bio is the first and often only text a potential match will read before deciding whether to engage. What someone chooses to write — or not write — reveals more about their intentions, personality, and potential red flags than most people realize.

Bios operate on two levels: what they explicitly say (content) and what they implicitly communicate (effort, tone, and attitude). A bio that reads 'no drama' explicitly requests a drama-free connection but implicitly communicates past conflict, unresolved baggage, and a tendency to externalize blame.

Bio Red Flags That Signal Trouble

Watch for these patterns in dating app bios:

  • Empty or emoji-only bios — signals low effort or mass-account creation
  • Negativity — 'no drama', 'swipe left if...', 'tired of games' signals unprocessed baggage
  • Lifestyle flexing — luxury photos and status signals often indicate scam profiles or superficiality
  • Immediate off-platform push — 'add me on Snap' in the bio avoids app safety features
  • Overtly sexual content — may indicate hookup-only intent packaged as relationship interest
  • Vague intentions — deliberate ambiguity about what they want lets them pursue anything without accountability
  • Bitter ex references — 'done with cheaters' or 'no more liars' signals unresolved past
  • Unverifiable claims — dream job, extensive travel, impressive connections that can't be checked

What a Genuine Bio Looks Like

Authentic bios share common traits: they contain specific, personal details (not generic lines), show effort and personality, state intentions clearly, and include conversation hooks that make responding easy. A genuine person writes a bio that reflects who they actually are — not who they think you want them to be.

The specificity test is particularly useful: a bio that mentions 'hiking the Gatineau trails on weekends' is much more likely to be genuine than one that says 'love to travel and have adventures.' Specific details are harder to fabricate and easier to verify.

Using Bio Analysis in Your Dating Safety Process

Bio analysis should be one step in a broader verification process. A great bio doesn't guarantee a great person, and a mediocre bio doesn't automatically mean trouble. But bios provide your first data point — and reading them critically rather than optimistically helps filter more effectively.

Combine bio analysis with photo verification, social media cross-referencing, and conversation pattern evaluation. When all signals align positively, proceed with confidence. When they conflict, investigate further before investing time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is an empty dating bio always a red flag?+

Not always — some people are simply bad at self-presentation or find bio writing awkward. But an empty bio combined with other signals (few photos, no verification, generic messages) increases the likelihood of a fake or low-effort profile. Consider it a yellow flag that warrants additional scrutiny.

What does 'no drama' in a dating bio mean?+

While it sounds reasonable on the surface, 'no drama' in a bio is one of the most reliable predictors of someone who creates drama. It signals past conflict they blame entirely on others, an unwillingness to handle normal relationship challenges, and a tendency to label any expression of needs as 'drama.'

Should I worry if someone's bio pushes me to another platform?+

Yes — this deserves caution. Moving off the dating app eliminates the platform's safety features, reporting mechanisms, and evidence trail. Legitimate reasons exist (some people prefer Instagram DMs), but combined with other red flags, it's a pattern common in scam and catfish operations.

How much should I read into a dating bio?+

A bio is a data point, not a verdict. Use it as a first filter, then verify through conversation and behavior. Pay more attention to what they do than what they wrote — actions over words is the fundamental principle of dating safety.