If you're Gen Z, these are the first date formulas you probably swear by 
Relationships

Gen Z’s first date formula: What’s hot, what’s not and what actually works

From walk-and-talks to vibe checks, Gen Z is rewriting the rules of first dates—no dinner reservations required

Atreyee Poddar

Gone are the days when first dates meant stiff conversations over a three-course meal. For Gen Z, dating is less about the performance and more about the vibe. In a world driven by low effort but high emotional intelligence, today’s young daters are ditching the scripts and curating experiences that are casual, cool, and quietly revealing. For Gen Z, the perfect first date isn’t a grand gesture—it’s a vibe check, a mini-audit of connection, and a stress-free way to gauge chemistry. It’s not about doing the most. It’s about doing what feels most you. Here’s how Gen Z is flipping the dating script—one oat latte and sunset walk at a time.

If you're Gen Z, these are the first date formulas you probably swear by

The walk-and-talk date

It’s free, low-pressure, and offers an easy out if it’s not clicking. Whether it’s a stroll around a lake, city block, or park trail, walk-and-talks are the go-to icebreaker. Movement helps ease nerves, and there’s always something nearby to comment on if conversation hits a lull. If you can walk and chat effortlessly for 30 minutes, that’s your litmus test.

The coffee (not dinner) test

Coffee dates have replaced dinners as the gold standard. Why? They’re short, sweet, and perfect for testing chemistry without a big time or financial commitment. Bonus points if the café is cute and worthy of sharing a playlist for that Instagram-soft-launch moment.

The shared niche interest hangout

Forget Netflix and chill—think comic book stores, vinyl hunts, food pop-ups, or pottery workshops. Gen Z loves building connection through shared interests, especially ones which are not mainstream. It gives the date personality and gives both people something to do when conversation feels shy.

The no-makeup, no-pressure rule

Authenticity is in. Gen Z tends to avoid over-styled looks or heavy grooming for date one. The vibe is “this is me, take it or leave it.” First dates are seen more as compatibility scans than romantic performances. Translation: no pretending to like jazz if you don’t.

Built in exit strategy

Whether it’s “I’ve got class in two hours” or “My friend’s calling in 45,” Gen Z doesn’t shy away from building boundaries into their date. The goal isn’t to rush, but to keep things grounded. If the vibe’s good? Great, stay longer. If not? Graceful exits are easy.