Conversation Starters
Five genuine questions to move a conversation beyond the weather and into something real. Refresh as many times as you need - And keep reading for the principles behind questions that actually create connection.
- → If you could have dinner with anyone, living or dead, who would it be?
- → What's something you've done recently for the first time?
- → What book, film, or album has genuinely changed how you think?
- → If you could live in any decade, which would you pick and why?
- → Do you have a recurring dream? What happens in it?
What makes a conversation starter actually work
Most conversation starters fall flat for the same reason: they're closed. They invite a one-word answer — "yes", "no", "fine" - And then stop. The conversation doesn't so much flow as it lurches from question to question, each one doing the work the last one failed to do.
The open-ended principle changes that. An open-ended question doesn't have a right answer or a short answer. It invites the other person to take the conversation somewhere. "Do you like travelling?" is closed. "What's a trip you took that ended up being nothing like you expected?" is open - It asks for a story, a memory, something with texture.
Specificity in the question creates specificity in the answer. The more precise your question, the more real the response. "What do you do for fun?" is vague and produces vague answers. "What's something you've gotten weirdly into lately?" is specific enough to unlock a conversation you couldn't have predicted - Which is exactly the point.
Questions by situation
On a first date
On a first date, use questions that invite storytelling rather than fact-reporting. You don't need to know their job title - You want to know what gets them lit up. Ask about a time, a memory, an experience that meant something. "What's the best decision you've made in the last couple of years?" opens more doors than "Where are you from?" because it gives you a glimpse of how they think, not just where they've been.
Early texting stage
In early texting, lighter questions build curiosity without the weight of a full interview. You're not trying to know everything about them - You're trying to give the conversation enough energy to survive until you meet. Playful hypotheticals, "would you rather" questions, and anything that invites a strong opinion work well here. The goal is to make them look forward to your messages, not feel like they're filling out a form.
Getting to know someone better (3rd+ date)
By the third or fourth date, surface-level questions feel like a step backwards. This is when you can go deeper: what they value, what shaped them, what they're quietly working toward. Questions about past experiences, relationships with family, or what they'd do differently if they could - These create the kind of intimacy that turns dating into something real. Use them when the conversation has already shown signs of depth, not as an ambush.
Turning an answer into a real conversation
A conversation starter is only the beginning. Once someone answers, the real work is listening - Not waiting for your next question, but actually tracking what they said and responding to it. Active listening means picking up the detail that stood out, following the thread that opened up, noticing the part of their answer that had energy in it. "You mentioned your sister - Are you two close?" is better than moving straight to your next prepared question.
The other half of conversation is reciprocity. When someone answers, they're often wondering whether you'll share too. Use their answer as a cue to offer something of your own - A parallel experience, a related opinion, something honest. The best conversations feel like an exchange, not an interview. For more on how to make this work in practice, see our first date conversation guide.
Related guides
First Date Conversation Guide
How to hold a conversation that makes someone want to see you again.
Break the Ice Questions
Eight questions to move past the awkward opening minutes.
For Shy Daters
Practical advice for connecting when conversation doesn't come naturally.
First Message Generator
Templates and tips for opening messages that actually get replies.