Profiled

How to Show Off on Dating Apps, Tastefully

well-dressed man in a classy bar, showing off tastefully, good expression

Dating app profiles are basically tiny personal billboards; everyone’s got assets they want to publicize:

“I am good at this.”
“I provide this type of experience.”
“I have XYZ.”

By all means, you should show what you’ve got going for you, but it’s essential to do so in a way that reads as confident and secure, rather than performative or inauthentic.

If someone writes “I’m successful / I’m attractive / I’m a great partner,” your brain doesn’t go “Ah yes, I totally believe them,” it goes, “Why are they trying to convince me?” It’s the same reason the old sentiment sticks: Nice people don’t need to say they’re nice, you can just tell.

So, how can you display your strengths and assets without “best-in-show” energy?

You show the evidence, casually through photos and prompts that support the story you want your profile to tell. And the type of photo matters, because not all “proof” lands the same. This article will show you how to smoothly present what you’re working with in a confident, authentic, and inviting way.

The cheat code is looking “chosen” instead of “trying.”

“Chosen” is looking selected instead of selling yourself.

People who already have social traction—friends, momentum, a life—don’t show up with an I need to prove myself vibe; they look secure.

Matches are allured by subtle sexiness, attraction, smarts, and wit. When it’s too in-your-face, it feels disingenuous, try-hard, ego-tripping, even insecure.

Chosen energy is the opposite. It’s when you look good in a way that feels effortless, like your best traits are just part of the scene, not the whole point of it; “I look good, and I don’t need to prove it” energy.

It’s the difference between flexing your arms in a mirror (curated) vs. a photo with friends where your arms just happen to look big (chosen).

Chosen energy reads as calm confidence. Instead of pleading your case, you’re letting people pick up the message naturally, and that’s usually what feels most attractive.

Quick rule: If the photo feels like it exists only to show off, it’s probably “trying.” If it feels like a real moment where you happen to look great, it’s “chosen.”

If you want to show you’re muscular (without screaming “LOOK AT ME”)

Do:

Don’t:

Women like it when they think they’re discovering your muscles; it’s sultry and mysterious. Rubbing your 8-pack in their face seems like an impromptu Magic Mike audition.

If you want to show your butt/curves/sex appeal (tastefully)

You can absolutely be sexy without tipping into full “thirst trap” mode, and honestly, tasteful usually pulls better matches. The goal isn’t to hide your body or your curves. It’s to show them in a way that attracts more than just the “here for one thing” crowd.

Do:

Don’t:

If you want to show you’re successful (without looking egotistical or pretentious)

Success is one of the easiest things to show off badly, because the “obvious” signals like fancy cars, luxury watches/purses, extravagant vacations, expensive champagne, private jets, etc., are basically universal red flags. You want people to assume you live well rather than feel you expect them to bend the knee in your presence.

Do:

Don’t:

If you want to show you’re educated (without sounding like bragging to your LinkedIn followers)

If the app lets you list your school or degree, use it. That’s the cleanest, least-cringey way to signal education.

The education field on Bumble.

Then, let the rest of your profile imply it. Don’t try to prove you’re smart, just show the kinds of things you’re into. Education is most attractive when it reads as curiosity and taste, not as a title you want credit for.

Do:

Don’t:

If you want to show your height (without making it weird)

Yes, some people care. No, you don’t need to make it your personality.

Do:

Don’t:

If you want to show “dad vibe” (safe, steady, dependable)

A lot of people are attracted to stability, warmth, and competence; they just don’t want to read it.

Do:

Don’t:

If you want to show you’re social (but not a party liability)

People want to know you have friends and a life, not that they’ll have to babysit drunk you on a night out.

Also, the company you’re showing matters because not all social proof reads the same. Ex: A photo of you and your pickleball friends is much more inviting than a photo of your pack of same-gender friends at a bachelor/ette party.

A profile says, “This is your life if you date me,” so make sure the setting is one they could see themselves in.

Do:

Don’t:

How to know if your photos are landing

If you’re unsure whether something reads confident or try-hard, ask yourself these three quick questions:

  1. Is my flex the subject of the photo?
  2. If the car/booty/abs/setting takes up more attention than you, dial it back.

  3. Does it invite connection?
  4. The best “showing off” makes someone want to be part of your life.

  5. Does your profile feel like a person, not a pitch?
  6. The highest-performing profiles usually:
    ✔️ Look good (lighting, angles, variety)
    ✔️ Signal value (without begging for credit)
    ✔️ Feel human (warmth + ease)

Or, skip the debate and test them on Photofeeler.

Pick a few contenders, run some quick tests, and build a profile that shows off your best traits without ever having to say them.

Test a photo now >