Profile Bio Generator

Answer five questions honestly and we'll turn your answers into a bio that sounds like you — not a list of adjectives.

Step of

Be specific. Not "I love travel" — try "I've eaten my way through most of Southeast Asia and I'm still thinking about a noodle dish in Hanoi."

Show, don't list. Instead of "I'm funny and adventurous", try: "I cook elaborate meals for one person and I'm not embarrassed about it."

Keep it brief. It's in your bio to give context, not to define you.

Honesty here filters out the wrong people fast — which is a good thing.

This becomes your bio's ender — an open door for someone's first message. e.g. "why I spent a year living in a van" or "my theory on the best film ever made".

Here's your bio

Make it yours

This is a starting point — edit it in your voice. The best bios sound like something you'd actually say. Read it out loud. If it sounds stiff, loosen it.

Put your bio to use

Create a free me.you profile and paste it straight in.

Create your free profile →
Writing a dating profile bio

What your bio is really trying to do

A dating profile bio is not a CV. Its job is not to appeal to as many people as possible — it is to appeal strongly to the right people and repel everyone else. The instinct to make your bio broadly likeable is the instinct that makes bios forgettable.

Specificity is the mechanism that makes this work. Specific details — a real place, an actual opinion, a genuine quirk — create recognition in the right reader. Generic details create no recognition at all.

Common bio mistakes — and how to fix them

Listing adjectives instead of showing them

Replace "I'm adventurous" with one specific example that demonstrates it.

Telling people what you're not looking for

Focus entirely on what you are looking for. Negative energy filters out good people too.

Making it too long

Aim for 3–5 sentences that land well. A short bio with one great line beats a long bio that buries it.

Opening with your job title

Your job can appear, but not as the first thing. Lead with who you are, not what you do for money.

Ending with nothing to respond to

Close with a question, a specific detail, or something that invites a follow-up message.

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