Tinder is the world's most downloaded dating app, with over 75 million active users and a brand so dominant it became a verb. With 10.6 million reviews analyzed across iOS and Android, no other dating app comes close to this volume of real user feedback—which makes Tinder a uniquely valuable case study in what happens when scale meets complacency.
At first glance, a 70% positive sentiment sounds defensible. But dig into the platform split—4.2 stars on iOS versus 3.8 stars on Android across a combined 10.6 million ratings—and a more complicated story emerges. The gap isn't a coincidence; it maps almost perfectly onto where Tinder's most aggressive monetization and moderation failures concentrate.
Tinder doesn't have a retention problem—it has a user respect problem.
— AppRoast AI Analysis, 2026-06-11ios vs android — a tale of two user bases
ai-classified · based on review sample
1.7M app store ratings · what users are saying
8.9M google play ratings · a different story
what this means for tinder — and its competitors
Tinder's data confirms one undeniable strength: brand gravity. A 70% positive sentiment across 10.6 million reviews means tens of millions of users still find enough value to stay, rate, and return. The core match mechanic remains sticky, and for a segment of users in high-density markets, it still delivers on its core promise of connection.
For PMs and founders building in the dating or subscription space, Tinder is a masterclass in what not to scale. Automated bans without appeals, paywalled core features, and algorithmic match suppression are short-term monetization moves that erode long-term trust—and the 23% negative sentiment across 10.6M reviews is the compounding invoice. The competitors who win next will do so by treating retention as a product problem, not a paywall problem.
See what your users are really saying — before your competitors do.
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