Modern Dating Terms You Need to Know in 2026
Dating in 2026 is basically a full-time job with no pay and a recruitment process that makes absolutely no sense.
Someone ghosts you after six great dates. Someone else texts you three times a week for four months, but never actually asks you out, what is going on?
You are not going crazy. You’re not unlucky. There is a whole glossary for exactly what is happening to you and once you know it, dating starts to feel a lot less like a mystery and a lot more like something you can navigate.
So, grab a coffee and read through these dating terms, we’ve included over 20 of them! Keep a quiet tally. And by the end, if your count is higher than five, just know you are in very good company.
Why Modern Dating Has Its Own Language
Dating has changed dramatically in the last fifteen years more than it did in the fifty years before that. The extensive use of apps, social media and being able to stay in touch with someone without seeing them in person, created completely new situations that needed new words.
When something keeps happening to people and there’s no name for it yet, eventually someone comes up with one. It spreads. Others see themselves in it. And suddenly everyone’s using it.
Whether you’re 32 or 62, at least a few of these are going to feel painfully familiar.
The Classics Modern Dating Terms
These have been around long enough that most people have a story. Possibly several.
- Ghosting
The original. Someone vanishes without a single word. No explanation, no sorry, no nothing. One day they are there, the next they are completely gone. It happens after one date and after one year. Still somehow shocking every time.
- Breadcrumbing
They drop just enough contact to keep you interested, but never follow through on anything real. A random ‘like’ on your social media post. A “hey, how are you” at 10 pm. The occasional ‘comment’ that means absolutely nothing. Not interested enough to pursue you. Not done enough to disappear. Just endlessly, frustratingly in between.
- Love Bombing
Day one and they are already telling you this feels different. The messages are constant, the compliments are over the top and everything moves at a speed that is hard to keep up with. Feels incredible. Until it stops. And it always stops. Looking back, the intensity was not passion. It was pressure.
- Orbiting
Similar to breadcrumbing, but a bit lighter. You stopped talking. Things ended. But they are still watching every single story you post on social media, liking old photos and occasionally tapping a reaction to something you share. Not in your life. Not out of it. Just silently circling from a safe distance like a very unhelpful satellite.
- Situationship
More than casual, less than a relationship, and somehow way messier than either. You’re spending time together, there are real feelings happening, but nobody’s said what this is. Usually lasts way longer than anyone planned and ends in a conversation that probably should have happened months earlier.
- Slow Fading
The polite exit is more confusing than just leaving. Replies shrink from paragraphs to single words. Response times go from minutes to days. Plans get hazier every time you try to make them. No conversation, no closure, just a slow disappearance that leaves you doing maths on when it technically ended.
- Benching
You are not the main event, but you are definitely on the list. They keep just enough contact to hold your attention while they focus on other options. They will get to you eventually. Or they will not. Either way, you are kept warm and waiting on the bench.
- Submarining
They ghosted you. Properly. Weeks went by, maybe months. Then one day, a casual “hey, how have you been” pops up as if nothing had happened. No apology. No explanation. Just back from the deep, acting completely normal and expecting you to do the same.
- Cuffing Season
Every year without fail, when the temperature drops and the nights get longer, suddenly everyone who was completely happy being single starts eyeing off a relationship. There is probably some science to it. There is definitely a pattern to it.
- Catfishing
The person in the photos is not the person you are talking to. The whole profile is a performance, sometimes slightly, sometimes completely. Old photos, borrowed photos, an entirely different identity. Our advice… video call early. Always.
- Textlationship
You talk every day. The messages are warm, funny, real. But the two of you barely see each other in person. From the outside, it looks like something. From the inside, it mostly just lives on your phone and never goes anywhere.
And now for The New Terms Doing the Rounds in 2026
Some of these are gaining new momentum and growing fast. Others are very new. All of them are things that are happening right now.
Beige Flag
Not a red flag, not a green flag. Just a bit odd. They have a very specific routine they refuse to budge from. They only ever order the same meal. Their whole personality is built around one very niche interest. Not alarming. Just beige. Worth noting.
Delusionship
A full romantic story that exists almost entirely in one person’s head. They have built something real from what is basically a handful of interactions and a lot of wishful thinking. The feelings are genuine. The relationship is mostly imagination.
Hardballing
Being completely upfront about what you want from the very start, with no softening and no playing it cool. Want something serious? They say so. Have non-negotiables? They come up early. Somehow, this still feels brave in 2026 when it really should just be normal.
Pocketing
Months in and you have never met a single friend, been mentioned anywhere on social media or been introduced to anyone in their life. You are in the pocket. Kept completely separate from everything else they have going on and starting to wonder why.
Roaching
You find out the person you have been seeing has been quietly dating multiple other people the whole time. When you bring it up, they point out that you never said you were exclusive. Technically fair. Still a bit of a gut punch.
Groundhogging
Dating the same type of person over and over, even though it never works out. Different name and face, same personality, same red flags, same ending. Like the movie, except it is your actual dating history and it stopped being funny a couple of rounds ago.
Dry Dating
Dates with no alcohol. Growing fast because people find they get a much clearer, more honest picture of someone when nobody needs a drink to get through it. A walk, a coffee, a long lunch. All completely underrated first date options.
Eclipsing
They slowly adopt all your interests to seem like an ideal match. You mentioned hiking once and now they are looking at trail maps. You talked about a band and suddenly it is their all-time favourite. Sweet at first. Unsettling the moment you clock what is happening.
Firedooring
A firedoor only opens one way. They reach out when they feel like it. They go quiet when they do not. You rearrange your schedule for them. They fit you in when convenient. You are giving everything and the door only ever opens from their side.
Pebbling
Sending small things because you crossed their mind. A funny clip, a meme, an article you would like. No grand gesture, no big declaration. Just a few consistent signs that they are thinking about you. Careful, perhaps you need an upfront conversation of what their interest is.
So, How Many Did You Recognise?
If it was just a couple, consider yourself lucky and maybe a little sheltered from the chaos.
If it was five to ten, welcome to modern dating. You are completely normal and slightly battle-hardened.
If it was more than ten, you have earned a very long break and probably a medal.
The good news is that knowing these terms means you can spot the patterns faster, stop wondering what you did wrong and start trusting your gut when something does not feel right. Because usually your gut already knew.
And if reading through this list felt less like a fun glossary and more like a personal journal, it might be time to try dating completely differently.
Ready to Date Without the Drama?
Vital Partners has been introducing genuinely single Australians since 1986. Our team across Sydney and Canberra takes the time to really get who you are and what you’re after, then introduces you to people who want the same things. Whether you’re in your 30s, 40s, 50s or 60s, it’s a completely different experience to anything you’ve tried before. And unlike online dating apps, you’re not alone. Your Vital Partners Consultant is with you all the way.
Contact Vital Partners and have a chat. You might be surprised how good dating can feel when someone is genuinely in your corner.
FAQs
What is the most common modern dating experience people have?
Ghosting comes up more than anything else. Most people who have dated in the last decade have either been ghosted or done it themselves. It never really gets less confusing for the person on the receiving end, no matter how many times it happens.
Are these terms used in Australia or mainly overseas?
Very much used in Australia. Most Australians who are actively dating will recognise the majority of these behaviours, even if they didn’t know the names for them.
Is being in a situationship always a bad thing?
Not at the start. But if months go by and nothing has shifted, it usually stops feeling good for at least one person. If you have been in a situationship for a while and want more clarity, the only way to get it is to have the actual conversation.
What is the difference between ghosting and slow fading?
Ghosting is sudden. One day they are there, the next they are gone. Slow fading is more gradual, with someone pulling back bit by bit until the conversation just dies. Both avoid a direct chat, but slow fading tends to leave people more confused because it takes longer to realise what is happening.
Is hardballing a good way to approach dating?
For a lot of people, yes. Being honest about what you want from the start saves everyone time and stops you from ending up in situations that were never going anywhere. It takes a bit of confidence, but most people respond well to someone who knows their own mind.
What do you do if someone is breadcrumbing you?
Say something or step back. You can ask directly whether they are interested in seeing you or just keeping the conversation going. Their response tells you everything. If they step up, great. If they get vague, that is your answer too.
Is dry dating worth trying?
Absolutely! When neither of you is a few drinks in, you get a much clearer read on whether the conversation flows naturally and whether you like this person. It does not have to be serious either. Coffee, a walk or lunch all work perfectly well.
How do you avoid ending up in a textlationship?
Suggest meeting in person sooner rather than later. If someone is genuinely interested, they will find the time. Extended texting with no real world meetup usually means one or both people are not fully invested. Even a short coffee date moves things forward.
How do you know if someone is pocketing you?
If you have been seeing someone for a few months and you have never met a friend, been mentioned anywhere or felt like a real part of their life, it is worth a direct conversation. There is a difference between someone who values privacy and someone who is actively keeping you hidden.
Can a matchmaker help with patterns like groundhogging?
Yes, genuinely. One of the benefits of working with an experienced matchmaker is that they offer an outside perspective on what you are looking for versus what keeps showing up. Sometimes the pattern is hard to see from the inside and a bit of honest guidance makes a real difference.

