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Why Halal Dating Apps Don't Work (And What I Built Instead)

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Fuaad NuurGrundare, Zawji
6 min lasning

Most halal dating apps fail serious Muslims because they're built like dating apps — endless swiping, gamified attention, low-intent matches, ghosting, and pay-to-win features — not like a path to marriage. What works instead is accountability, real intentions stated upfront, family involvement, and depth over photos.

📌Key insights
  • Most halal dating apps fail serious Muslims because they're built like dating apps.
  • endless swiping, gamified attention, low-intent matches, ghosting, and pay-to-win features.
  • not like a path to marriage.
  • What works instead is accountability, real intentions stated upfront, family involvement, and depth over photos.

I spent the better part of a year on Muzz, Salams and Hawaya. I am a practising Muslim who wanted one thing: to get married. I left more tired, more cynical, and more alone than when I started. The problem, I eventually realised, was not me. It was the design.

They're dating apps wearing a thobe

Open any of them and the mechanics are identical to Tinder: a deck of faces, swipe right, swipe left, a little dopamine hit when someone likes you back. The word "halal" is in the marketing, but the psychology is pure dating app — built to keep you opening the app, not to get you married and gone.

A marriage platform should be "designed to be deleted." A dating app is designed to be opened again tomorrow. Those are opposite goals, and you feel it in your bones after a month.


The four things that broke me

No serious intent. Half the people are there to chat, to pass time, to feel wanted. You can message someone for three weeks and discover they were never actually looking to marry. There is no filter for seriousness, because seriousness is bad for engagement metrics.

Ghosting is the norm. Conversations evaporate. People match, talk, then vanish — because there is no accountability and no cost to disappearing. You start to feel disposable.

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Photos first, deen last. You are judged, and you judge, on a photo taken in good lighting before a single word about someone's prayer, character, or intention. That is backwards for marriage, and it quietly rewards the wrong things.

Pay to be seen. Boosts, "see who likes you", premium swipes. The business model is to keep you anxious and paying, not to get you matched. The more you struggle, the more they earn.

What "serious" actually needs

The longer I looked, the clearer the missing pieces became. Serious Muslims don't need more profiles to swipe. They need:

  • Stated intentions, upfront — everyone there to marry, not to browse.
  • Accountability — a space where ghosting and bad behaviour have consequences, not anonymity that rewards them.
  • Family as part of it, not a secret — a process you could actually tell your parents about.
  • Depth over looks — judged on deen, character and goals first.
  • An honest business model — one that makes money when you succeed, not when you suffer.

What I built instead — and what it isn't

Soker du sjalv nikah?

Zawji ar gratis halal matchmaking for muslimer i Norden. Las mer →

So I built Zawji. It's the opposite of a swipe app by design: profiles lead with deen and character, not photos; there's a real person reviewing the space, not just an algorithm; family and wali are welcome in the process, not hidden from it; and it's built for nikah, with the honest goal that you find someone and leave.

I'll be straight with you about what Zawji is not. It is not magic. It will not hand you a spouse next week. The serious work — getting to know someone properly, involving your family, making istikhara — is still yours to do. What it changes is the room you do that work in: smaller, more serious, more accountable, and built for the outcome you actually want.

If you've tried the rest and felt that exhaustion, you're not broken and you're not picky. You were just in the wrong room.

Frequently asked questions

Are halal dating apps haram? The apps themselves aren't a ruling question — it depends on how you use them. Khalwa (private seclusion), free-mixing, and immodesty are the concerns. A moderated, family-friendly process avoids most of these by design, but consult a scholar for your situation.

Why do I keep getting ghosted on these apps? Because there's no accountability and no real intent filter. Anonymity plus zero consequences equals disappearing. A space built for marriage, with real moderation, changes that incentive.

Is Zawji free? There's a free tier so you can start, and a paid membership for those who want more. It's a yearly subscription, not pay-per-message — the model is to help serious people marry, not to charge you for every swipe.

What makes Zawji different from Muzz or Salams? It's built for nikah, not engagement: deen-first profiles, real moderation, family-friendly, and an honest goal of helping you find someone and leave.

You've tried the rest. Maybe it's time to try the one built for nikah.

🕌

From the Seerah

Khadijah och Profeten ﷺ — det första äktenskapet i islam

Khadijah (radiyallahu anha) var en framgångsrik affärskvinna som själv föreslog äktenskap med Profeten ﷺ. Hon skickade sin väninna Nafisah för att sondera terrängen, och sedan gick Profetens ﷺ farbror Abu Talib till hennes familj. Processen var öppen, respektfull och involverade familjen.

Ibn Hisham, as-Seerah an-Nabawiyyah

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Fuaad Nuur

Founder of Zawji — wali-friendly halal matchmaking built for nikah. For Muslims worldwide.

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Common questions

The apps themselves aren't a ruling question, it depends on how you use them. Khalwa (private seclusion), free-mixing, and immodesty are the concerns. A moderated, family-friendly process avoids most of these by design, but consult a scholar for your situation.

Because there's no accountability and no real intent filter. Anonymity plus zero consequences equals disappearing. A space built for marriage, with real moderation, changes that incentive.

There's a free tier so you can start, and a paid membership for those who want more. It's a yearly subscription, not pay-per-message, the model is to help serious people marry, not to charge you for every swipe.

It's built for nikah, not engagement: deen-first profiles, real moderation, family-friendly, and an honest goal of helping you find someone and leave.

Was this article helpful?

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