# How to Spot a Catfish on a Dating App

> Fake profiles are everywhere on swipe apps. Here's how to spot a catfish — and why Lamp's compatibility-first model is structurally resistant to them.

Published: 17 June 2026 · Updated: 17 June 2026 · By The Lamp Team
Canonical: https://lampdating.com/blog/how-to-spot-a-catfish

You match. The photos are flawless — almost suspiciously so. They message first,
quickly, warmly. The conversation accelerates at a pace that feels almost too good.
Within days they are talking about destiny, connection, meeting soon. And then comes
the request. A small favour. A hardship they did not see coming. They hate to ask, but
you feel so close already.

That is a catfish. Or rather, that is the end of a catfish operation — the moment the
script pivots from relationship-building to extraction. The warning signs come much
earlier, and once you know them, they are impossible to miss.

## What a catfish actually is

A catfish is someone who creates a false identity online — usually by stealing real
people's photos — to deceive a target into an emotional connection they then exploit.
Motivations vary: financial fraud, loneliness, revenge, sometimes simple sadism. The
result is always the same: the target invests real emotional energy into someone who
does not exist.

The swipe apps have made catfishing structurally easy. When you can create an account
in minutes with any photos and any biography, and the platform's incentive is engagement
rather than authenticity, fake profiles proliferate. Read our piece on
[why dating apps don't work](/blog/why-dating-apps-dont-work) for the full structural
critique — but the catfish problem is one of the most damaging expressions of it.

## Warning sign 1: the photos are too perfect

A genuine person's photos are a mix — good days, bad days, candid shots, posed shots,
different eras of their life. A catfish profile typically shows a narrow set of
professionally gorgeous images that all feel like they belong to a modelling portfolio.
If every photo looks like it was taken for a magazine and none look like a normal Tuesday,
that is your first flag.

The immediate check: reverse-image search every photo. On a desktop browser, right-click
and select "Search image." On mobile, screenshot and use Google Lens or TinEye. If
those photos appear elsewhere — on a different name, a different profile, a stock photo
site — you have your answer. Do this before you invest emotionally. It takes thirty
seconds.

## Warning sign 2: the biography feels assembled, not lived

Real people write dating profiles in their own voice, with specific details that only
make sense if you've actually lived the life being described. A catfish biography tends
to be pleasantly generic — they love travel, they value loyalty, they want something
real. Beautiful sentences that say nothing particular about this person.

Read the profile looking for specificity. Where exactly do they travel? What kind of
work do they actually do? What is one opinion they hold that is genuinely theirs?
Vagueness is not inherently suspicious — people write bad profiles — but combined with
the other signals, it is part of the pattern.

## Warning sign 3: the escalation is abnormally fast

Genuine connection develops at a human pace. A catfish needs to accelerate that process
artificially, because they are running a script and time is a resource. They will use
language that feels disproportionately intense too soon — soulmate, destiny, never felt
this way, I can picture our future — before you have had a single real conversation about
who either of you actually are.

This emotional acceleration is deliberate. It creates a sense of intimacy and obligation
that the catfish then leverages. If you notice yourself feeling a depth of connection
with someone you have never met, based on conversations that have never gone beyond
surface warmth, slow down. Real connection requires real revelation — and real revelation
takes time.

[Love bombing](/glossary/love-bombing) — the overwhelming of a target with affection
and attention — is the catfish's primary tool. Recognise it for what it is.

## Warning sign 4: they avoid video calls

This is the single most reliable test available to you. A real person can video call.
A catfish cannot — because the moment you see them live, the game is over. They will
have every excuse: bad connection, camera broken, working unusual hours, shy about
video. Some will promise to call soon and never follow through.

Request a video call early. Not as an ultimatum, but naturally — "it'd be good to
actually see you, shall we do a quick video call this week?" A genuine match will say
yes. Watch what happens when they don't.

## Warning sign 5: inconsistencies accumulate

Nobody has a perfect memory — but a catfish is managing a fabricated narrative that
does not correspond to an actual life, so their details drift. They mentioned a sister
last week; this week they are an only child. Their job changed. The city they grew up
in shifted. They said they had been to a place they later claim never to have visited.

Keep light mental notes. One inconsistency is nothing; a pattern of them is everything.
When you gently probe the inconsistency — "I thought you said you grew up in Edinburgh?"
— a catfish will either become defensive or pivot smoothly. A genuine person will
explain or laugh and correct themselves.

## Warning sign 6: any request for money, gift cards, or personal details

This is the operational end-point of most catfish operations. Once they have established
emotional connection, they manufacture a crisis — medical emergency, stuck abroad, a
business deal gone wrong — and ask for financial help. The ask is often framed as
temporary and repaid in full when they arrive (and they are always about to arrive).

There is no version of this that is legitimate. A person you have never met in person,
who refuses to video call, does not need your money. They need you to report the profile
and stop responding. Read our guide on [how to spot a romance scam](/blog/how-to-spot-a-romance-scam)
for the financial fraud angle in full — the overlap with catfishing is near-total.

## Why swipe apps are a catfish-friendly environment

The swipe model optimises for volume. More users, more swipes, more engagement metrics.
That creates an environment where a fake profile faces almost no friction: no deep
onboarding, no structured matching process that would expose inconsistency, no incentive
for the platform to remove profiles that drive engagement.

[Swipe fatigue](/glossary/swipe-fatigue) is partly a catfish problem — when the volume
is high enough, you cannot scrutinise each profile properly, which is exactly what fake
profiles rely on. The speed and disposability of swiping strips out the friction that
would otherwise expose them.

## How Lamp's model structurally resists fake profiles

Lamp [matches on personality and values](/how-it-works) — an AI-driven process that
requires a depth of self-disclosure that is antithetical to fabrication. You cannot
assemble a fake identity and then consistently produce coherent, specific, authentic
answers about your values, what you want, how you live. The matching process itself
applies pressure that surface-level fake profiles cannot sustain.

Beyond that, Lamp introduces you to a small number of genuinely compatible people
rather than handing you an infinite swipe stack. That changes the dynamic entirely.
You have reason to engage carefully with each introduction — and so does the other
person. The volume-pressure that fakes exploit simply does not exist in the same way.

Genie, Lamp's AI dating assistant, can also help you think through early interactions —
suggesting questions, flagging things worth digging into, helping you move from
pleasantries to real conversation faster. Not by sending messages for you (it never
does that), but by helping you ask better questions and notice more. The kind of
questions a catfish cannot answer plausibly.

See [how Lamp compares to Tinder](/compare/lamp-vs-tinder) and [Lamp vs Hinge](/compare/lamp-vs-hinge)
for a full breakdown of why the compatibility-first model is a fundamentally safer
environment.

## What to do if you think you're being catfished

First: stop sharing personal information immediately. No address, no workplace, no
financial details. Second: reverse-image search every photo they have shared. Third:
request a live video call and note their response. Fourth: report the profile to the
platform using the in-app reporting tool. Fifth: if money has already been transferred,
contact your bank immediately — many banks can reverse recent transactions.

Do not feel embarrassed. Catfish operations are run by people who do this professionally,
and the scripts are designed by people who understand human psychology at a level most
of us do not. The target is never the problem; the platform environment that permits
these operations is.

## The bottom line

Fake profiles are a structural feature of swipe apps, not an aberration. The warning
signs — perfect photos, accelerating emotion, video-call avoidance, financial requests —
follow a predictable pattern once you know it. Reverse-image search early. Request a
video call naturally. Note inconsistencies. Never send money.

And if you are exhausted by an environment where this vigilance is even necessary, that
is a reasonable response. The [compatibility-based matching](/glossary/compatibility-based-matching)
model Lamp is built on is not just more likely to produce a real relationship — it is
a materially safer place to be looking for one.

Download Lamp free on the App Store. Real matches. No fake faces.

## Frequently asked questions

**How do you spot a catfish on a dating app?**

Reverse-image search their photos, notice inconsistent details, watch for pressure and evasion about video calls.

**What are the warning signs of a fake dating profile?**

Too-perfect photos, a biography that feels assembled rather than lived, reluctance to video call, fast emotional escalation, and any request for money or gift cards.

**Can you get catfished on AI dating apps?**

The risk is structurally lower on Lamp because matching happens on verified personality and values — volume-chasing swipe apps create the environment fakes exploit.

**What should I do if I think I'm being catfished?**

Stop sharing personal information, reverse-image search every photo, request a live video call, and report the profile immediately.
