# How to Write a Dating Profile That Actually Gets Replies

> How to write a dating profile that gets replies: be specific, show your real life, give people something to ask about, and skip the clichés.

Published: 28 May 2026 · Updated: 28 May 2026 · By The Lamp Team
Canonical: https://lampdating.com/blog/how-to-write-a-dating-profile

Most dating profiles fail for the same dull reason: they sound like everyone
else's. "Love to laugh, love to travel, looking for my partner in crime, can't
do without my morning coffee." It's not that any of it is untrue — it's that none
of it is *you*. A stranger reading it learns nothing they couldn't guess about a
thousand other people, so there's nothing to reply to.

The good news is that a profile that genuinely gets replies isn't about being the
funniest or the most photogenic person in the queue. It's about being specific,
honest and easy to start a conversation with. Here's how to do it — and, if you're
on an AI dating app like Lamp, why a richer profile quietly improves your matches
too.

## Why most profiles get ignored

Before the fixes, it helps to understand the failure mode. A vague profile asks
the reader to do all the work. Faced with "I love food and good vibes," what is
anyone supposed to say? "Me too"? There's no foothold, no detail to grab, no
question that writes itself. So they swipe on, or the match sits there until it
quietly expires.

Generic profiles also blur you into the crowd. When fifty bios say "looking for
someone genuine," the word stops meaning anything. The profiles that get replies
are the ones that feel like a specific human being wrote them about their actual
life — because those are the only ones that give a reader something real to react
to.

## Be specific, not impressive

This is the single most important rule, so it comes first. Trying to sound
impressive makes you sound like everyone else trying to sound impressive. Being
specific makes you sound like you.

Swap the abstract noun for the concrete scene:

- Instead of "I love travel," try "I plan whole trips around one restaurant I
  read about — last one was a tiny place that only does mushrooms."
- Instead of "I'm adventurous," try "I will absolutely talk you into a cold-water
  swim and then complain about it the entire time."
- Instead of "I love food," try "I make a genuinely excellent roast and a deeply
  mediocre risotto, and I'm working on the risotto."

Notice what specifics do: each one hands the reader an obvious opening line. The
mushroom restaurant invites a "where was it?" The risotto invites a "what's going
wrong with it?" You've done their work for them, which is exactly what a good
profile should do.

## Show your real life, not a highlight reel

People connect with texture, not perfection. A profile that's all summits and
sunsets reads like a brochure; a profile with a couple of real, slightly ordinary
details reads like a person you could actually spend a Tuesday with.

Give a true picture of your week — the Saturday-morning ritual, the hobby you're
secretly competitive about, the show you're embarrassed to love, the way you take
your weekends. The mundane specifics are often the most magnetic, because they're
the ones a compatible person recognises. Someone scrolling past "wine and box
sets on a rainy Sunday" who feels exactly the same way has just found their
opening.

This matters double on an AI dating app. As our
[how AI matchmaking works](/blog/how-ai-matchmaking-works) explainer describes,
the matching reads what you write and builds a model of who you are. Honest,
specific detail gives it a far truer picture than polished vagueness — so a real
profile doesn't just get you more replies, it gets you better-matched people in
the first place.

## Give them a hook to grab

Every strong profile has at least one deliberate conversation-starter — a hook.
It can be a playful challenge ("convince me deep-dish counts as pizza"), an
unfinished thought ("ask me about the time I accidentally entered a chilli-eating
contest"), or a small, specific opinion people will want to argue with.

A hook works because it removes the hardest part of messaging: deciding what to
say. You've effectively left a door open. The best hooks are easy to respond to,
a little bit fun, and impossible to answer with a one-word reply. One good hook
beats five vague sentences.

## Pick photos that tell the truth

Words do the heavy lifting, but photos still set the first impression — so make
them honest and varied. A clear shot of your face, one that shows you doing
something you actually do, and one with a bit of life or humour in it will almost
always beat a grid of moody, near-identical selfies. Skip the heavy filters and
the group shots where nobody can tell which person is you. The goal isn't to look
like a model; it's to look like the person who'll actually walk into the café.

## Say what you're looking for, plainly

Don't bury the point. If you want a relationship, say so. If you're not sure yet,
say that honestly too. Stating your intention clearly does two things: it filters
out mismatches before they waste anyone's time, and it signals a refreshing lack
of game-playing that the right people find genuinely attractive.

On Lamp, this is what a **Wish** is for — you describe the person and the
connection you're hoping for in plain English, the way you'd tell a friend,
rather than wrestling with dropdown filters. "Someone curious and kind who wants
to build a life, not just fill a weekend" tells the matching far more than any set
of checkboxes could. You can see how that fits the wider experience on the
[how it works](/how-it-works) page and in our
[AI matchmaking glossary](/glossary/ai-matchmaking).

## Let an AI assistant help — then make it yours

Staring at a blank box is where most profiles die. If you're on Lamp,
[**Genie**](/glossary/ai-dating-assistant) — its AI dating assistant — can draft a
bio that sounds like you, suggest a hook, or help you tighten a rambling
paragraph. Crucially, Genie **only ever suggests; it never sends or acts on your
behalf.** Treat its draft as a strong starting point, then edit until it's
unmistakably yours. A profile written *with* help and finished in *your* voice
beats both the blank box and the obviously auto-generated one.

## A quick checklist before you publish

Run your profile past these before it goes live:

- **Specific over impressive.** At least two concrete details only you would
  write.
- **Real life, not a highlight reel.** Something ordinary and true, not just the
  greatest hits.
- **At least one clear hook.** A line that's easy and fun to reply to.
- **Honest, varied photos.** Your face is clear; at least one shows you doing
  something real.
- **Your intention, stated plainly.** No one has to guess what you're after.
- **It sounds like you out loud.** Read it aloud; if it sounds like a CV or a
  cliché, rewrite it.

## The bottom line

A dating profile that gets replies isn't a marketing exercise — it's an honest,
specific snapshot of a real person, written so it's easy to start a conversation
with. Be specific, show your actual life, leave a hook or two, and say what you
want without hedging. Do that, and you'll get better replies from better-matched
people — and on an AI dating app, you'll quietly improve the matches themselves.

Ready to put it into practice? See our honest guide to the
[best AI dating app](/blog/best-ai-dating-app), or download Lamp free on the App
Store and let AI matchmaking introduce you to a curated few people who genuinely
fit your life.
