Profile Tips

How to Write a Hinge Bio That Gets Likes

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Hinge profiles get one shot at conversion. The prompt structure — what to say in your three short answers — matters more than people realise. Here's what tops profiles do differently, based on 12,000 profiles analysed.

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The Three-Prompt Structure

Successful Hinge profiles in our analysis followed a consistent pattern: identity, story, hook. One prompt establishes who you are, one tells a small specific story, and one gives the other person something concrete to respond to.

Prompt 1: Identity

Pick a prompt that lets you state something specific about your taste, work, or worldview. 'I'll know I've made it when…' is stronger than 'My most controversial opinion…'. The prompt frames the answer.

Prompt 2: Story

Use 'A life goal of mine' or 'The most spontaneous thing I've done' to tell a 2-3 sentence story. Specific beats general. 'Took a 3am train to see the sunrise in Brittany' beats 'I love adventures.'

Prompt 3: Hook

End with a prompt that invites a response — 'Two truths and a lie', 'Change my mind about', 'Dating me is like'. Give the other person an easy entry point.

The Most Common Mistake

Listing things instead of telling stories. 'I love coffee, hiking, and good books' is the same as every other profile and conveys no information. Pick one of those things and tell a story about it. Specificity wins.

What Top Profiles Don't Do

Methodology

Profile analysis based on 12,000 Hinge profiles collected from our research panel members between Jan and March 2025. Match rates compared between profile structures.