Tinder’s CPO on Tinder Vault, the company’s anticipated $500 per month offering

Tinder is pushing forward with its $500-per-month subscription offering, tentatively called “Tinder Vault.”

The feature is still in the early days, says the company’s chief product officer, Mark Van Ryswyk. Tinder could still pull plans to release it, or at least drastically cut prices. It’s still unclear as to when Tinder would want to release the offering broadly.

“I’m always like, ‘I want it yesterday.’ And, of course, these things don’t work that way,” Van Ryswyk says. “We’re still in this learning mode.” Part of that is figuring out how something that could cost someone $6,000 per year adds value to the overall Tinder ecosystem. It can’t break the experience for Tinder’s free members, which make up the vast majority of overall users. And it has to be impactful enough for the serious daters willing to pay for Vault.

The company has been under a period of change since Bernard Kim took over Match Group broadly last May, and then as Tinder’s interim CEO in August. The dating giant posted its first-ever quarterly decline during its fourth quarter of 2022, with Kim partly blaming Tinder’s “weaker-than-expected product execution.” Kim said during the earnings call in February that things have turned around, and Tinder now has a strong focus on product momentum.

Tinder Vault fits in as part of this refresh of the company’s star brand.

“We’re really looking at a whole range of additional value-add services to Tinder overall,” Van Ryswyk says. The executive points toward experiences learned from Match Group’s July 2022 acquisition of The League, an exclusive dating app that costs up to $1,000 per week. It showed Tinder that there’s “high intent members” who are looking for quality matches and experiences and willing to shell out a small fortune. Tinder can lean into helping them discover future partners or relationships.

Vault will be an amplification of Tinder’s technology, rather than an entirely new segment like building out human matchmakers. Van Ryswyk declined to comment on exactly what features Vault will have compared to its other, less expensive premium offerings. Right now, users can pay for things like profile amplification, limitless swipes, and prioritized likes, which is when a paying member’s likes are likely to be seen before non-payers.

The Tinder Vault testing comes at a time when consumers are increasingly price-conscious and cutting costs where they can to deal with high inflation. Van Ryswyk says that League members have stayed strong, showing the dating space can be resilient to macro conditions. But Tinder is also exploring a weekly subscription offering to Tinder Plus for people who may not want to shell out the funds for a full month or year of access.

The ultra-premium test run coincides with Tinder’s larger rebrand. The company, known by many for being a hookup app, is trying to shift the narrative and recently launched its first ever marketing campaign that shows Tinder is there for long-term relationships as well.

“It’s great to see us start to claim our voice again,” Van Ryskwyk says.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90874250/tinders-cpo-on-tinder-vault-the-companys-anticipated-500-per-month-offering?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Created 2y | Apr 3, 2023, 4:21:37 PM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

HUD is eyeing a crypto experiment. Some government workers are concerned

This story was originally published by ProPublica.

The U.S.

Mar 10, 2025, 1:30:06 PM | Fast company - tech
AI slop is suffocating the web, says a new study

The generative AI revolution shows no sign of slowing as OpenAI recently rolled out its GPT-4.5 model to paying ChatGPT users, while competitors have announced plans to introduce their own latest

Mar 10, 2025, 11:10:08 AM | Fast company - tech
I tried out a bunch of the AI assistants. Here’s what you need to know about each one

Does it feel to you like there are way too many AI assistants to keep track of?

Between ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, Google Gemini, Anthropic Claude, DeepSeek, and others, it’s hard

Mar 10, 2025, 11:10:07 AM | Fast company - tech
TikTok’s ‘recession brunette’ trend signals tough economic times

Noticed all the blondes going back to their natural hair color lately? As much as many try to claim it’s because of a “hair health journey,” other factors seem to be at play here. 

Mar 10, 2025, 6:30:08 AM | Fast company - tech
3 simple ways to fight back against spam calls

There’s a special place in you-know-where for spam callers. They’re annoying. They waste time. They’re also dangerous.

And while it’s challenging to eliminate spam calls entirely,

Mar 10, 2025, 6:30:07 AM | Fast company - tech
Back from Extinction: How Colossal Is Charting a New Frontier in Genomics

Featuring Ben Lamm, Founder and CEO, Colossal Biosciences and Joe Manganiello, Actor, Producer. Moderated by Kc Ifeanyi, Executive Director of Ed

Mar 10, 2025, 1:50:05 AM | Fast company - tech
iPad shoppers beware: One of the new models is not like the others

This week, Apple updated half of its iPad lineup.

After updating the iPad Pro and iPad mini in 2024, the company has just unveiled a third-generation iPad Air and an eleventh-generation

Mar 8, 2025, 12:40:08 PM | Fast company - tech