JDate Statistics 2026: The Chosen App's Unchosen Numbers

52% of Jewish online marriages, 90,000 active users, and a parent company that literally went bankrupt. Mazel tov.

TL;DR: Your Bubbe Lied About JDate

I dug through the JDate statistics so you don't have to scroll through a dating app older than some of its users' grandchildren. Here's the deal.

  • JDate launched in 1997 and claims responsibility for 52% of Jewish online marriages. That stat comes from a self-funded survey of ~1,000 people. From 2011. Sure, and I once claimed responsibility for inventing the high-five.
  • Active users have cratered from ~750,000 at peak (2010) to roughly 90,000 as of late 2025. That's fewer people than attend a mid-tier college football game.
  • The platform skews older. Average age 37-43, largest age group is 55+ at 27%. If you're under 30, you'll feel like you showed up to your parents' dinner party by accident.
  • Pricing ranges from $29.99/mo (6-month plan) to $59.99/mo (monthly). For an app with 90K users. Let that math marinate.
  • Parent company Spark Networks went through a 2024 financial restructuring where an investment firm literally forgave $45M in debt to become sole owner. Nothing says "thriving business" like debt forgiveness.

JDate Statistics at a Glance: The Spreadsheet Your Mother Would Frame

Before we get into the weeds, here's JDate by the numbers. Print this out and put it on your fridge next to that photo of your cousin's wedding (the one your mom keeps pointing at).

StatDetail
Founded1997, Beverly Hills
Parent CompanySpark Networks SE (Berlin)
Registered Users~750,000 (peak, 2010)
Active Users~90,000 (late 2025)
Weekly Active~50,000
Gender Split53-57% male / 43-47% female
Largest Age Group55+ (27%)
Claimed Success Rate52% of Jewish online marriages
Pricing Range$29.99-$59.99/mo
iOS Rating2.83/5
Google Play Rating~1.7/5
Yelp Rating1.1/5
Ticker SymbolLOV (NYSE)

That ticker symbol is "LOV," by the way. Which is both adorable and deeply ironic given the state of things.

JDate Statistics: How Many People Are Actually on It? (Spoiler: Not Many)

Let's address the elephant in the room. Or rather, the lack of elephants. The JDate app user numbers tell a story of decline that would make a Greek tragedy look upbeat.

At its peak around 2010, JDate boasted approximately 750,000 active monthly users with over 93,000 paid subscribers. For a niche dating site focused on the Jewish community, those were genuinely impressive numbers. The president of Match.com reportedly used JDate to find a partner. That's like the CEO of Coca-Cola getting caught buying Pepsi.

Fast forward to late 2025, and you're looking at roughly 90,000 active members. About 50,000 of those are weekly active users, and approximately 300,000 users are based in the US (though "based in the US" and "actually logging in" are two very different things).

For context, Tinder has 75 million+ users. Bumble has 40 million+. Even Christian Mingle, JDate's sibling app under the same parent company, pulls bigger numbers. JDate's user base is basically a rounding error compared to the major apps.

To their credit, Spark Networks claims the fall 2025 JDate redesign resulted in a 50% increase in daily active users. Which sounds great until you realize 50% more of not-very-many is still not-very-many.

JDate Demographics: Your Bubbe's Favorite Dating Pool

If you're picturing a vibrant sea of twenty-somethings, adjust your expectations. Significantly.

The JDate user base tells us exactly who's still holding on to this platform.

Age Distribution

  • 55+: 27% (the largest group, and not by a small margin)
  • 25-34: 25% (the second biggest cohort, bless them)
  • 35-44: 18%
  • 45-54: the rest fills in here
  • Average user age: 37-43 years old

So if you're a 25-year-old signing up for JDate, congratulations. You're statistically in the minority and your potential matches are more likely to ask about your 401(k) than your favorite bar.

Gender Split

The gender ratio sits at roughly 53-57% male to 43-47% female. That's actually not terrible compared to most dating apps. Most platforms skew heavily male, so JDate's relative balance is one of the few genuinely nice things I can say about it.

Education

Here's where it gets interesting. 65.7% of JDate users had completed or were working toward advanced degrees. This is a highly educated user base. Whether that translates to better conversation is another question entirely, but at least your match can probably spell "commitment."

Geographic Spread

JDate users concentrate in the US, with notable populations in Canada, Israel, and the UK. Within the US, expect the heaviest presence in cities with large Jewish populations. If you're on JDate in rural Montana, you might be swiping through the same four profiles for the rest of your natural life.

The 52% Marriage Claim (and Why You Should Squint Real Hard at It)

JDate's headline stat is that 52% of Jewish married couples who met online met on JDate. They plaster this number everywhere. It's their golden calf (too on the nose?).

Here's what they don't plaster everywhere.

That figure comes from a ResearchNow survey of approximately 1,000 married Jewish internet users. The study dates from around 2011. Over 15 years ago. When JDate had virtually no competition in the Jewish online dating space. When "swiping" was something you did to clean a counter.

JDate also claims 63% of all online dates among Jewish singles came through their platform. Again, from the same era when JDate was basically the only option if you wanted to date Jewish people online.

No independent, peer-reviewed study has replicated these numbers. JDate commissioned the research itself. That's like me commissioning a study that finds I'm the world's greatest dating blogger. (I mean, I am, but I shouldn't be the one funding the study.)

Since 2008, about 5 out of 9 Jewish people admitted to using online dating, and 80% of those used either JDate or eHarmony. In 2026, with Hinge, Bumble, and Tinder all offering religion filters, that landscape has changed completely. The 52% stat is a relic from a different internet.

JDate Pricing: Because Love Among the Chosen People Ain't Free

Let's talk money. JDate pricing sits at the premium end of the niche dating app spectrum, which is bold for an app with the user base of a medium-sized retirement community.

PlanMonthly CostTotal
1 month$59.99/mo$59.99
3 months$44.99/mo$134.97
6 months$29.99/mo$179.94

JDate bills all plans upfront. No monthly installments. They want your money now, like a caterer who's been burned before.

For comparison, JSwipe (JDate's own younger sibling app) costs around $10/month. Tinder Gold runs about $30/month with 75 million users. Hinge+ is around $35/month. You're paying Hinge prices for a user base that's 0.1% the size.

The free tier exists but is essentially useless. You can browse profiles but you can't message anyone. It's the dating app equivalent of going to a restaurant, reading the menu, and then being told you can't order anything. A masterclass in frustration.

JDate vs. the Competition: A Family Feud (Literally)

Here's where things get weird. Several of JDate's competitors are owned by the same parent company. It's like watching siblings fight at Thanksgiving dinner, except the dinner costs $60 a month.

JSwipe

Also owned by Spark Networks. Over 1 million users, and it skews younger. 32% of users are 18-24. App-only, Tinder-style swiping interface. Basically everything JDate isn't. If JDate is a formal dinner party, JSwipe is the pregame.

Lox Club

The "exclusive" option for Jewish dating. Invite-based, aimed at urban professionals, roughly $12/month equivalent. It positions itself as the The League of Jewish dating. Whether that exclusivity translates to better matches or just a smaller pool of the same people is debatable.

General Dating Apps

Here's the kicker. Hinge, Bumble, and Tinder all have religion filters now. eHarmony reportedly has MORE Jewish singles than JDate in absolute terms. So the "we're the only place for Jewish dating" argument that powered JDate for two decades has completely evaporated.

If you're under 35 and Jewish, you're almost certainly better off on a mainstream dating app with a religion filter than paying $60/month for a shrinking pool on JDate.

Spark Networks: The Corporate Dumpster Fire Behind Your Dates

Oh boy. If you thought the JDate stats were rough, wait until you hear about the company running it.

Spark Networks SE is a Berlin-based company that trades on the NYSE under the ticker LOV. Their portfolio includes JDate, Christian Mingle, JSwipe, Zoosk, EliteSingles, and SilverSingles. It's like the Voltron of struggling dating apps.

The timeline reads like a corporate thriller nobody asked for.

  • 2019: Acquired Zoosk for approximately $258 million. A huge bet.
  • 2020: Revenue peaked at $233 million across all brands. Not bad.
  • 2021-2023: Steady decline. Revenue dropping. Users leaving.
  • January 2024: Financial restructuring. MGG Investment Group forgave $45 million+ in debt and became the sole equity holder. They also injected approximately $24 million in fresh capital. In plain English, an investment firm looked at Spark Networks and said "you literally cannot pay your bills, so we'll erase your debt if we get to own you." Romantic.
  • October 2024: Acquired Filter Off, a video speed dating startup. Because when you're hemorrhaging users, the solution is clearly to buy another company.
  • Fall 2025: Major JDate redesign, repositioning matching as "intentional and values-driven."

The company that owns JDate has ~100 million registered users across ALL its brands combined. JDate's 90K active users represent a tiny fraction of even its own parent company's ecosystem.

App Store Ratings: Ouch Doesn't Cover It

If the user numbers made you wince, the ratings will make you flinch.

  • iOS App Store: 2.83 out of 5 (from 60 ratings)
  • Google Play: Approximately 1.7 out of 5
  • Yelp: 1.1 out of 5 from 120 reviews
  • Trustpilot: 1.4 out of 5

A 1.1 on Yelp. I've seen gas station sushi get better reviews.

Common complaints include a limited match pool (shocking, with 90K users), unresponsive customer support, and difficulty finding matches outside major metro areas. One user review summed it up perfectly: "I was either too Jewish or not Jewish enough." If that isn't a metaphor for the entire JDate experience, I don't know what is.

The fall 2025 redesign attempted to address some of these issues. JDate won a Webby Award back in 2006 and has been featured in the New York Times and Bloomberg. But awards from two decades ago don't fix a 1.7-star Google Play rating today.

Is JDate Worth It? The Honest Answer

Look. I've spent enough time in the dating app statistics trenches to know when a platform is past its prime. JDate is past its prime. It was past its prime when "Gangnam Style" was still the most viewed YouTube video.

That said, if you are specifically looking for a serious relationship with someone Jewish, you're over 40, you live in a major metro area with a large Jewish population, and you don't mind paying premium prices for a small pool of users... JDate might still be worth a shot. That's a lot of "ifs," but they're honest ones.

For everyone else? A better dating app with a religion filter will give you a bigger pool, better app experience, and lower price. Or if you're over 55 and looking for options, check out our best senior dating sites roundup.

And hey, if you're on Tinder or Hinge already, upload your data to see how your profile actually stacks up. At least those apps have enough users to generate meaningful statistics.

FAQ

How many users does JDate have?

As of late 2025, JDate has approximately 90,000 active users, with about 50,000 weekly active users. This is down dramatically from its peak of around 750,000 active monthly users in 2010.

Is JDate free?

JDate offers a limited free tier where you can create a profile and browse, but you need a paid subscription to send or read messages. Plans range from $29.99/month (6-month commitment) to $59.99/month (monthly). The free version is essentially a preview mode.

What is JDate's success rate?

JDate claims that 52% of Jewish married couples who met online met on JDate. This comes from a self-commissioned survey of approximately 1,000 married Jewish internet users, conducted around 2011. No independent study has verified this number, and the dating landscape has changed dramatically since then.

Is JDate worth it in 2026?

For a specific subset of users (over 40, in major metro areas, specifically seeking Jewish partners for serious relationships), JDate can still work. For younger users or those in smaller cities, mainstream apps with religion filters typically offer a better experience at a lower price point.

What's the difference between JDate and JSwipe?

Both are owned by Spark Networks. JDate is the desktop-first, traditional dating platform that skews older (average age 37-43). JSwipe is the mobile-first, Tinder-style swiping app that skews younger (32% are 18-24). JSwipe has over 1 million users and costs around $10/month. They're siblings in the same corporate family going after different age demographics.

Sources

About the Author

Paw

Paw

Dating Expert at SwipeStats.io

5 min read

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