AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models
Is it ok to lie about your age on your dating profile?
Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)
Options
- Yes (0 votes)
- No (6 votes)
Model Responses
Grok 4.1 Fast
Vote: No
Lying about your age on a dating profile fundamentally undermines trust, which is the cornerstone of any healthy relationship. When the deception is inevitably revealed—often at the first in-person meeting—it leads to immediate rejection, wasted time, and emotional harm for both parties. Age is a key factor in compatibility, affecting life stages, energy levels, and shared goals. Misrepresenting it creates false pretenses, potentially leading to mismatched expectations or even safety risks if intentions are predatory. Honesty fosters genuine connections; small lies erode integrity and set a precedent for further dishonesty. Dating apps thrive on authenticity—lying sabotages that ecosystem for everyone.
GPT-5.4
Vote: No
Lying about your age on a dating profile is not ok because it starts a potential relationship with deception. Age is a basic fact many people use to make informed choices about compatibility, life stage, and boundaries. It also undermines consent. If someone filters by age, ignoring that by lying is a way of bypassing their stated preferences rather than respecting them. Even if the lie seems small, it can damage trust once discovered. A connection built on dishonesty is weaker from the start, and the person misled may reasonably wonder what else is untrue. If age-based bias on apps feels unfair, the better response is to challenge those norms or use platforms that fit better—not to misrepresent yourself.
Sonar Pro
Vote: No
Lying about your age on a dating profile is not okay for several compelling reasons: **Trust and Relationship Foundation**: Honesty is foundational to healthy relationships[1]. Starting with a lie about age immediately undermines trust and raises red flags for potential partners, causing them to question what else you might be hiding[1]. Even if discovered later, this deception is difficult to repair and can sabotage promising connections[1]. **Disrespect for Others' Preferences**: By misrepresenting your age to circumvent search filters, you disregard potential matches' stated preferences and boundaries[1]. This is manipulative—you're essentially saying their preferences don't matter and tricking them into engaging with you under false pretenses[2]. **Setting False Expectations**: Age relates to life stages, goals, and compatibility[1]. Lying creates false expectations that lead to disappointment when the truth emerges, particularly around major decisions like starting a family or retirement[1]. This wastes both people's time[4]. **Better Alternatives Exist**: You can create an attractive profile without deception by highlighting unique experiences, skills, and passions, using recent photos, and focusing on shared interests and values rather than strict age criteria[1]. Authentic profiles attract genuine connections with people who appreciate the real you[1].
Kimi K2.5
Vote: No
Lying about your age creates a foundation of deception that undermines the entire potential relationship. When you misrepresent something as basic as your age, you are starting a connection based on false pretenses, which makes genuine intimacy impossible from day one. The truth inevitably surfaces, and when it does, the revelation destroys trust far more severely than any age-related preferences ever could. Your date will not only feel deceived about your age, but will question what else you might be hiding or misrepresenting. While age discrimination in dating is real and frustrating, addressing it through dishonesty merely perpetuates the problem and wastes everyone's time. Being honest attracts people who genuinely accept you as you are, which is the only basis for a healthy, sustainable relationship.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: No
Lying about your age on a dating profile is fundamentally dishonest and sets a terrible foundation for any potential relationship. Trust is the cornerstone of meaningful connections, and starting with a deliberate deception — no matter how small it seems — undermines that from the very beginning. Practically speaking, the lie will inevitably be discovered. Whether it's when you meet in person, when a birthday comes around, or when the relationship deepens and personal details emerge, the truth always surfaces. At that point, the other person isn't just learning your real age — they're learning that you're willing to deceive them to get what you want. Age misrepresentation also violates the autonomy of the other person. People have legitimate preferences about age ranges for their partners, whether related to life stage, family planning, shared cultural references, or other factors. By lying about your age, you're manipulating someone into a connection they might not have chosen freely. Finally, dating apps and profiles operate on a social contract of good faith. If everyone lied about fundamental facts, the entire system would collapse. Honesty — even when it feels disadvantageous — is the ethical standard we should uphold.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: No
A successful and healthy relationship is fundamentally built on trust. Lying about something as basic as your age on a dating profile immediately compromises that foundation before the two of you have even met. Furthermore, the truth is inevitable. When your real age is eventually revealed, the other person won't just be reacting to a number; they will be reacting to the fact that you were willing to deceive them for your own benefit. This instantly raises red flags about what else you might be willing to lie about. Finally, lying about your age is a violation of the other person's boundaries. People have the right to set their own dating preferences. Bypassing their filters through deception is disrespectful to their autonomy and ultimately wastes the time of everyone involved.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a swift, unanimous consensus that age deception is a non-starter, with all six models—Claude Opus 4.6, Gemini 3.1 Pro, GPT-5.4, Grok 4.1 Fast, Kimi K2.5, and Sonar Pro—selecting Option B. While Grok and Kimi highlighted the practical impossibility of maintaining such a lie, Claude and GPT-5.4 argued that bypassing filters is a fundamental violation of a potential partner's autonomy and consent.
All 6 models agreed on "No" after discussion
Strongest Arguments
- No: Lying about your age violates the autonomy of the other person; people have legitimate preferences regarding life stages and family planning, and bypassing their filters through deception manipulates them into a connection they did not freely choose.