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Review · 6 min read

CooMeet reviews: what users say and how to pay less

We've gathered CooMeet reviews from Trustpilot, Sitejabber, Otzovik, and Google Play — with no made-up quotes and no sugarcoating. We break down what the platform is praised for, what it's criticized for, and honestly show how to get part of your spending back with cashback.

Where these reviews come from

First, about the method. We don't make up quotes or retell stories about "a friend of a friend" — below are generalized themes from public review platforms: Trustpilot, Sitejabber, Otzovik, Google Play, and complaint forums. As of July 2026, on Sitejabber CooMeet has 2.4 out of 5 based on 43 reviews; another aggregator shows those same 43 reviews as 2.9 out of 5, so these figures shouldn't be trusted down to the decimal. We weren't able to verify the exact rating on Trustpilot, so we won't cite a specific number.

And one more nuance that affects the picture: there are quite a few clone domains and "review" sites around CooMeet that pass themselves off as official. The real domain is only coomeet.com, and current prices and terms are worth checking right there.

What CooMeet is praised for

The positive reviews are fairly unanimous and revolve around three things.

  • Fast matching. On Trustpilot and in detailed reviews (for example, DatingScout), users note the instant connection with a conversation partner, a convenient app with no ads, and simple registration.
  • "The girls are real." In positive reviews on Otzovik, people write about verified profiles and the absence of bots. Women's accounts really do go through verification: a profile plus phone and email, and the system takes verification photos during registration and calls.
  • The format. Live video instead of endless texting — many people like this more than classic dating profiles.

What people complain about

The price and the minutes that melt away

The most common financial complaint is «too expensive». On Sitejabber and Google Play people write that buying minutes «costs a fortune», and without a paid subscription the app is essentially unusable. The numbers back this up: as of July 2026 a minute costs about $0.50 — typical packages are 10 minutes for $5, 60 for $25, 360 for $100. And to use minutes at all, you need an active Premium subscription (from ≈$9.99 a month, longer plans go down to ≈$4.99/mo). There is essentially no free mode: according to reviews, newcomers get only about 5 minutes after signing up — after that everything costs money. A full breakdown of the pricing is in the article how much CooMeet costs.

Minutes don't carry over

Sitejabber reviews say it again and again: unused minutes «disappear». More precisely, according to consistent descriptions, bonus minutes burn out when the subscription ends, while purchased ones don't burn out but get «frozen» until it's renewed. We weren't able to verify an official page with these terms, so before you buy, check the rules inside your own account.

Automatic subscription renewal

A widespread topic on complaint forums: the subscription renews automatically, and users report charges even after trying to cancel. Some complaints describe recurring charges of a few dollars every month that they can't stop. The advice is simple: if you don't plan to keep using it, turn off auto-renewal right after purchase and check your card statement.

«The girls are paid conversation partners»

A recurring grievance on Trustpilot and Sitejabber: the women on the platform get paid for communication. This is exactly the service's official model, but some men find out about it after the fact and feel deceived about «meeting people». Let's be blunt: CooMeet is a paid video chat with verified conversation partners, not classic dating where «everyone here is just for fun».

Support and bans

Experiences are polarized. On Sitejabber there's a case of a successful $100 refund through support — and right alongside it, complaints that requests are ignored or answered with canned replies. A separate topic is sudden account bans without explanation. Women complain too: frozen funds after a withdrawal request and a $50 withdrawal threshold (according to reviews on Otzovik and Trustpilot).

The honest verdict

As a product, CooMeet works: it quickly connects you with real verified conversation partners and charges a noticeable fee for it. Most of the negativity isn't about «the service doesn't exist» — it's about money: the price of minutes, auto-renewal, and expiring bonuses. If the paid video communication format suits you, there's really only one problem here — the cost. If it doesn't, take a look at CooMeet alternatives.

Who it's for: people who value the «open it and you're already talking» format and are willing to pay for verified conversation partners. Who it's not for: people looking for free dating or expecting the girls here to be «just regular users» — the disappointment in the reviews is most often about exactly that.

How to pay less: Purple cashback

The number-one complaint — the price — is exactly what cashback softens. Purple doesn't change CooMeet's rules and doesn't make it free: it returns part of your activity as bonuses.

  • For men — up to 40% in coins from purchases on the partner platform.
  • For women — cashback for communication activity: 5% on Basic and 35% on Premium (Premium in Purple is free and available to women).
  • For everyone — daily tasks with bonus coins and a referral 5% from the activity of the people you invite.

The money path is transparent: coins → bonus boxes → dollars → withdrawal to Telegram Wallet from $10. Onboarding in the Telegram Mini App takes about a minute. How it all works is on the page about cashback, and other working ways to save (longer plans, a trial for $1.99, promos for newcomers) are in the article how to save on CooMeet.

There's no magic here: cashback returns part of your spending, not all of it — but on regular purchases the difference is noticeable. Purple and CooMeet are services for adults (18+).

Frequently asked questions

Is CooMeet a legitimate service or a scam?

A legitimate service with real charges and real payouts: with real conversation partners, real charges, and real payouts to the women. The complaints mostly concern prices, auto-renewal, and support — not the service being «fake». The only important thing is to use the official coomeet.com — there are plenty of clones online.

Are the girls on CooMeet real?

Yes. Women's profiles go through verification (profile, phone, email plus verification photos), which is why bots are hardly ever mentioned in reviews. But remember: the girls get paid for communication — that's the platform's open model, not «random users».

Why is CooMeet so expensive?

Because you pay both for minutes (≈$0.50 per minute as of July 2026) and for the subscription, and part of that money goes to the conversation partners and to verification. Always check current prices on coomeet.com — they can change.

How to pay less?

Three honest ways: choose a longer subscription plan (down to ≈$4.99/mo instead of ≈$9.99), use the official trial (3 days + 10 minutes for $1.99 — given once), and enable Purple cashback. «−90% promo codes» from coupon sites are auto-generated fakes, and «cheap accounts» from third parties are prohibited by the service's rules and risk a ban with loss of money.