And flirting on the internet is no longer a side quest — it’s the stadium. Since about three in 10 American adults have used a dating app, understanding how to flirt on it is something that’s actually applicable beyond the one-time fling — especially considering glitches can kill or build attraction. The good news: digital charm is teachable, evidence-based and more about clarity than cleverness.
Understand the dynamics of digital flirting and cues
At its heart, flirting is a low-stakes way of testing the possibility that another person may return our interest in them before considering taking things further with them. Online, you’re doing the same job, with fewer in-person nonverbal cues. Communication scholars call this “reduced-cue” interaction; Joseph Walther’s social information processing theory demonstrates that even lacking touch, people go on to develop intimacy — with words, timing, and style rather than body language.
- Understand the dynamics of digital flirting and cues
- Open strong with your first message on dating apps
- Use tone tools like emoji, punctuation, and GIFs wisely
- Craft playful banter that builds authentic attraction
- Master timing and pace for better online conversation
- Respect consent and boundaries while keeping it flirty
- Photos and voice notes: suggest, don’t overshare
- Spot the signals: green lights versus red flags
- Transition smoothly from texting into an IRL date
- When all else fails, be human and keep it considerate

Open strong with your first message on dating apps
Skip “hey.” Begin with something that’s rooted in their profile so you’re not just sending a halo of boilerplate. A wall of text will lose to one or two crisp lines.
Sample replies:
- “Your food photo has made me hungry — signature dish?”
- “You’ve hiked Zion — what trail would you do over again?”
- “Two truths and a lie about your dog? I’m weirdly good at guessing.”
Comments attached to a prompt or photo lead to significantly more replies, according to Hinge Labs. Specificity is a signal of attention, and its own kind of attraction.
Use tone tools like emoji, punctuation, and GIFs wisely
Without facial cues, you can easily misinterpret tone. A strategically inserted emoji or GIF definitely helps that playfulness come across. A study by the Kinsey Institute and others found that frequent emoji users seem to have more sex than non-users, for example, and are sexually intimate in ways many of us can’t even fathom.
Rules of thumb:
- One emoji helps; three can muddle.
- Keep it rated G until you’ve built mutual interest.
- Sarcasm doesn’t travel well — throw in a wink or frame it as light teasing.
Craft playful banter that builds authentic attraction
Good flirting is a loop: you fire, they return shot, your spark increases slightly. Try:
- Playfully mimic: reflect their energy and length of message to feel together.
- Compliment-plus-curiosity: “Your playlist taste is elite. What’s your most controversial banger?”
- Contextual teaser: “Bold claim that you make the best guac. I’ll be the judge — what’s your secret ingredient?”
- Call-backs: refer to an earlier joke or detail for persistence: “Guess who just walked past a taco truck and thought about the Guac Champion.”
Master timing and pace for better online conversation
You don’t have to be quick to engage. Think rhythm, not speed. At first, short, immediate exchanges feel fun; after that, slightly longer ones start to create more of a vibe. And if your schedules don’t jibe, call it: “I’m off-grid until 6, but I can’t wait to swap stories then.” Transparency beats guessing games.
If you double text, do so only for value — not just poking. Example: “And how about that rooftop ramen spot you told me about? Added to my list.”

Respect consent and boundaries while keeping it flirty
Consent is attractive. Hurry up and ask before turning the heat on. Try: “Can I be a little more aggressive with flirting?” or “Curious if you enjoy playful innuendo or if it’s better to go PG for now.”
Do not share anything intimate without explicit permission. Unsolicited explicit content is not edgy — it’s illegal, and in some places, a crime. Groups such as the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative urge the importance of establishing clear rights and control (no forwarding, no screenshots) around the exchange of sensitive messages.
Photos and voice notes: suggest, don’t overshare
Think cinematic, not literal. Harness flattering natural light or unique crops, or go for the details that make you you (your concert wristband at the show, your hiking boots on a lookout point, latte art you did well). Who wants a bathroom mirror with the same confident smile? Trading spicy content? First, agree on parameters and keep IDs out of frame.
Voice notes are underrated. A warm tone and a quick laugh provide chemistry that text can’t carry. Keep them short, 20–30 seconds or so, and end with a question that calls for an answer.
Spot the signals: green lights versus red flags
Green lights include:
- Reciprocation (they ask you things back)
- Playful escalation
- A reasonable amount of time elapsed in relation to how busy they tell you they are
- Respect for boundaries
Red flags include:
- Negging (pushing back when you set a boundary)
- Pressure to move platforms right off the bat
- Love-bombing (just too much intensity)
- Pushing back after you’ve said no; trust your discomfort as your screen for how they’ll be offline
Transition smoothly from texting into an IRL date
Many apps and judges of relationship status recommend tapping out of endless chat once there’s momentum. Propose a specific, low-key scenario and window: “This has been fun — know it’s last minute, but coffee at Oak & Ivy this weekend?” Saturday late morning or Sunday afternoon — that work?
If you are looking for a step in between, propose a brief video hello. Surveys of major dating sites have found most singles want a video date to check vibes with potential dates before meeting in person for the first time.
When all else fails, be human and keep it considerate
You don’t have to be a comedian or a novelist. You must be mindful, considerate, and slightly brave. Online flirting is, in many ways, trickier than typical dating or public flirting. That combination translates so well — from app to text (or maybe a Facebook relationship status), and finally to a real table for two.