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How couples meet: Mesmerising graph reveals how Tinder has killed off traditional romance By OLIVER PRICE, DATA JOURNALIST Published: 10:36, 4 January 2025 | Updated: 10:43, 4 January 2025 e-mail View comments Back in the day, couples typically met at bars, with those flirty glances eventually progressing into blossoming romances. Others might have been set-up by friends playing Cupid. Nowadays, however, singletons hit the love jackpot by swiping through a conveyor belt of strangers' faces on dating apps.

A mesmerising chart today shows how the likes of Tinder and Hinge have killed off the traditional ways lovers used to meet. In the early 1960s, more than a third of couples originally met through friends. Another 28 per cent were introduced to each other by family members.



By the late 2010s, online dating stole the top spot, according to research carried out by social scientists at Stanford University. As of this decade, internet dating has completely eclipsed all other methods, being responsible for 59 per cent of all relationships. Dating guru Kate Mansfield, who brands herself the UK's premier relationship coach, said that the 'super convenient', low pressure online dating environment is what has made it so popular among today's singles.

Your browser does not support iframes. She said: 'You can swipe from your couch in your pyjamas. It opens up so many more possibilities than just the local bar.

'Meeting online takes away some of the awkwardness of face-to-face introducti.

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