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Money · 6 min read

How Much CooMeet Costs: Minute Prices and How to Save

CooMeet is paid for men, and the meter runs by the minute. Let's break it down honestly: how much minutes and Premium cost as of July 2026, why your balance drains faster than you'd expect, and how to get part of your spending back.

How payment works on CooMeet

The model has two parts, and that's the main thing to understand before your first payment. The first is a Premium subscription: it unlocks access to the video chat. The second is minutes: an internal currency that gets deducted while a conversation is going on. Minute packages are bought separately from the subscription.

The detail that most often causes confusion: minutes don't work without an active Premium subscription. Buying just a minute package isn't enough — without a subscription they simply sit in your balance. Several independent reviews of the platform agree on this, including DatingScout.

For women it's the other way around: they don't pay for communication, they earn from it. But this article is about spending, so we're counting the men's side.

CooMeet prices as of July 2026

An honest disclaimer up front: all the figures below come from independent reviews as of July 2026. The platform can change its rates at any time, so always check the final price on the official coomeet.com before paying. Specifically on coomeet.com: there are many clone domains around the service that pose as the official site.

Premium subscription

  • 1 month — about $9.99;
  • 3 months — about $7.99 per month;
  • 6 months — about $4.99 per month;
  • a promo for new users — $0.99 for the first month (recorded by the DatingScout review);
  • trial access — 3 days of Premium and 10 minutes for $1.99, offered only once.

Sources differ slightly on the details: some describe the cheapest plan as six-month, others as annual at the same $4.99 per month, and they count bonus minutes bundled with plans differently (roughly 25 to 100). So treat this grid as a guide, not a price list.

Minute packages

The base rate is roughly $0.50 per minute, and larger packages work out cheaper per unit:

PackagePricePer minute
10 minutes$5$0.50
60 minutes$25≈ $0.42
360 minutes$100≈ $0.28

Why minutes drain faster than they seem to

Minutes are deducted for conversation time, and here's the main surprise for newcomers: your balance runs out faster than you expect. A 10-minute package is literally a few short conversations, and without paid packages the app is practically unusable.

This is one of the most common complaints in reviews: on Sitejabber and Google Play, users regularly write that buying minutes «costs a pretty penny» and that minutes drain too quickly. This isn't a bug but the monetization model: you're paying precisely for communication time, so keep an eye on your balance and don't keep a conversation going «out of inertia». We've put the fuller picture together in a separate breakdown of real CooMeet reviews.

Do minutes carry over

A question worth settling before buying a large package. According to the descriptions in reviews, the fate of unused minutes is as follows: bonus (gift) minutes expire, when the Premium subscription ends, while purchased minutes don't expire but get "frozen" — you can't use them without an active subscription.

Some reviews also use wording like "minutes don't carry over and disappear before the next billing cycle" — most likely this refers specifically to bonus minutes. The short rule: some of the minutes may expire, so before a large purchase, check the current terms on coomeet.com.

Example: how much it comes to per month

Below is just an example for reference, not platform data and not a promise. Your spending depends on how much and with whom you communicate.

  • Moderate scenario: Premium for a month ($9.99) plus a 60-minute package ($25) — around $35 total. That's roughly an hour of video communication per month.
  • Active scenario: Premium plus a 360-minute package ($100) — around $110 per month.
  • With a long-term plan Premium ($4.99 per month), the moderate scenario drops to around $30.

How to save: what works and what doesn't

Use the platform's own discounts

The biggest real discounts are built into the product: a $1.99 trial, a $0.99 promo for the first month, and long-term Premium plans that come out roughly half the price of paying monthly. These are mechanics confirmed by reviews — no codes to enter.

Don't hunt for "−90% promo codes"

Coupon sites show the same "Get 90% Off" for CooMeet for months on end, contradict each other within the same month (15%, 20%, 90%), and even promise "free shipping" — for a video chat. No review confirms that CooMeet even has a public promo-code program at all. This is auto-generated SEO noise, not discounts.

Be careful with "cheap accounts"

Resellers sell accounts with minutes 3–4 times cheaper than official prices. But transferring and buying accounts is directly prohibited by the terms of service, and the sellers themselves acknowledge the risk — it's no coincidence they promise an "account replacement" if it gets banned. You can lose both your money and the account.

Turn off auto-renewal right away

The most common money complaint in reviews is being charged for a subscription the user thought was canceled. If you don't plan to stay long, turn off auto-renewal right after purchase and make sure it's genuinely off.

Get part of your spending back with cashback

This is where Purple comes in — a Ukrainian cashback service on top of a partner platform. It doesn't change CooMeet's prices and doesn't make the service free — it honestly returns a share: up to 40% in coins on purchases on the partner platform. Women earn cashback for their activity in communication: 5% on Basic and 35% on Premium (in Purple it's free and available to women). Separately, there are referral 5% from the activity of those you invite and daily tasks with bonus coins.

The money's path is simple: coins → bonus boxes → dollars → withdrawal to Telegram Wallet from $10. Onboarding in the Telegram Mini App takes about a minute. Details are in the breakdown of how Purple cashback works. Want to squeeze out the maximum — here's the full guide on how to save on CooMeet. And if the prices just don't work for you — take a look at an alternative to CooMeet.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a free period on CooMeet?

A full one — no. According to reviews, after registration you get around 5 free minutes to look around the service. After that comes a 3-day Premium trial with 10 minutes for $1.99, and this trial is given once: on a repeat purchase from a new account, no bonus minutes will be credited.

Why is money still being charged even after canceling the subscription?

Premium renews automatically, and in reviews this is the most common financial complaint: there are reports of charges even after an attempt to cancel. So turn off auto-renewal right after your purchase, double-check that it's actually off, and dispute any questionable charges through the platform's support.

Do unused minutes carry over?

According to the descriptions, purchased minutes don't expire, but they're locked without an active Premium subscription; bonus minutes expire along with it. Before buying a large package, check the current terms on coomeet.com.

How can you get part of your spent money back?

Two ways. The first is CooMeet support: reviews on Sitejabber include a confirmed case of a $100 refund, and one source mentions a refund for unused minutes within 20 days — but that's unverified information, so check the terms with the platform's support. The second is systematic: cashback through Purple, which returns part of your spending in coins.

Purple is available only to adults (18+). Cashback returns part of your spending for real activity — with no promises of a “free CooMeet” and no guarantees of earnings.