Summary: Bumble is evaluating a possible sale and has engaged Morgan Stanley to advise on a potential transaction, sources with knowledge of the discussions said. The company is contending with falling paying users and shrinking revenue while its shares have plunged, and observers caution that a sale is not assured.
Bumble, the Austin-based dating platform that gained recognition for its women-first contact policy, has initiated exploratory discussions about a sale and is working with investment bankers at Morgan Stanley, people familiar with the matter told sources close to the company. The individuals spoke on condition of anonymity because the deliberations are private.
Those familiar with the process emphasized that a sale is not inevitable and that Bumble could opt to remain an independent company. Bumble did not immediately reply to requests for comment. Morgan Stanley and Blackstone - which data from LSEG show holds roughly a 22% stake in the company - declined to comment.
Market performance and ownership
Bumble's shares have declined sharply over the past year, falling 48% and leaving the company with a market capitalization of about $388 million. Whitney Wolfe Herd, who helped found the company in 2014 and built its identity around a "women-first" approach to online dating, returned to the chief executive role in March 2025 after stepping down in 2023. Wolfe Herd also became the youngest woman to take a company public in the United States when Bumble listed in 2021.
Private equity firm Blackstone bought a majority stake in Bumble's parent, then known as MagicLab, in 2019 in a transaction that valued the business at about $3 billion. MagicLab was later renamed Bumble Inc. and went public in February 2021 with a valuation exceeding $7 billion. This month, Blackstone affiliates sold $28.2 million of Bumble shares.
User metrics and financial trends
The company has experienced slowing growth and a drop in monetized users. Total paying users fell by more than 11% in the full year 2025 to roughly 3.7 million, while annual revenue decreased nearly 10% to about $966 million. In the first quarter of 2026, Bumble's paying users declined by about 20% year-on-year as the company removed accounts with lower engagement.
To counteract lower user counts, Bumble has implemented price increases and worked on extracting more revenue per paying customer, with average revenue per paying user rising modestly. Nonetheless, analysts cited in the reporting noted that the company faces intensified competition, changes in how users approach online dating and a general fatigue with dating apps, particularly among younger demographics.
Bumble's signature motto, "Built for Women, Better for Everyone," which helped differentiate the brand, has been characterized by some analysts as losing distinctiveness as user behavior in the online dating market evolves. The company has broadened its product set beyond dating with offerings such as Bumble For Friends, a social networking feature, and Bumble Bizz, focused on professional connections, but those extensions remain relatively small components of the overall business.
Competitive context
Larger competitor Match Group has also seen slowing growth, but its market value has risen by about 12% over the past year, a contrast to Bumble's share performance.
Investment product mention
The reporting includes reference to a third-party tool: ProPicks AI evaluates BMBL alongside thousands of other companies each month using more than 100 financial metrics. The description states the AI generates stock ideas by assessing fundamentals, momentum and valuation, and highlights past winners that include Super Micro Computer (+185%) and AppLovin (+157%). It also notes users can check whether BMBL appears in any ProPicks AI strategies.
Key developments to watch
- Ongoing sale process and potential bidders or outcomes - the company is working with Morgan Stanley while a sale remains uncertain.
- Operational metrics such as paying user counts and average revenue per paying user, which have moved meaningfully lower or modestly higher as described.
- Strategic responses to competition and changing user preferences, including pricing and expansion of non-dating features that currently make up small portions of revenue.