Texas's App Store Age Law Hits Dating Apps. Three States Watch.
Texas's ASAA creates OS-level download friction for dating apps before users reach onboarding. Louisiana, Utah, and California have similar laws ready to follow.
- Texas's App Store Accountability Act requires all under-18s to link app store accounts to parental profiles for download monitoring; the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a lower court block, allowing enforcement during ongoing litigation.
- Dating apps, which universally require users to be 18-plus, must categorize themselves in the adult bucket, triggering app store-level friction before potential members ever reach onboarding.
- Louisiana, Utah, and California have passed similar legislation that could follow if Texas's law survives legal challenges.
- Match Group (MTCH) stock is down 45% from its 2021 peak; Bumble (BMBL) is trading below its IPO price, neither company needs new user acquisition friction added to the mix.

A US appeals court has handed dating platforms a compliance problem they didn't create and can't control. The Fifth Circuit's decision to allow enforcement of Texas's App Store Accountability Act adds an OS-level friction layer that sits upstream of every dating app's onboarding flow, which means the smoothest sign-up experience in the industry is now irrelevant if users can't clear the app store download screen first. For an industry already managing compressed valuations and rising customer acquisition costs, this is a gate that operates entirely outside their product.
The legislation is designed to protect children. Its effect on dating apps, which prohibit under-18s and have no interest in them, is incidental and potentially significant.
The High Intent Take
Dating apps don't want underage users. The reputational risk, regulatory exposure, and trust and safety costs make it a losing proposition before you even get to the ethical dimension. But the ASAA doesn't care about intent. It creates friction at the app store level, not the app level, and that friction hits your target demographic (adults, 18-plus) just as hard as the minors it's designed to catch. You're paying for a compliance problem you didn't cause, with a commercial cost that hits your acquisition funnel before you even get to show someone what your product does. That's the actual issue here, and it's getting worse before it gets better.
How the Mechanism Actually Works
Under the ASAA, anyone under 18 in Texas must connect their Apple or Google account to a parent's for oversight of downloads and purchases. Developers must categorize apps by target audience: under-13s, teens 13, 15, older teens 16, 17, or adults 18-plus. Dating apps fall into the adult bucket, correctly, given that they prohibit minors. But that categorization signals to the app store that an age verification prompt is warranted before the user downloads.
The problem is that the friction doesn't cleanly distinguish between "you're under 18 and need parental consent" and "we need to confirm you're over 18 before you download this." Consider the actual user journey: a 20-year-old in Austin sees an ad for a dating app, clicks through to the App Store, and hits a prompt asking them to verify age or link an account to a parent's profile. They're the target demographic. The prompt doesn't communicate that clearly. Confusion leads to abandonment. Abandonment leads to lost installs. Lost installs translate directly to higher customer acquisition costs for platforms already operating on compressed marketing budgets.
The friction sits at the wrong point in the journey. Dating apps can optimize every aspect of their onboarding, and have, but none of that matters if users abandon the download screen before the app even loads.
The Fifth Circuit's decision reversed an earlier federal judge's order that had blocked the ASAA on First Amendment grounds. That lower court compared the law to requiring bookstores to verify age before customers could browse, a comparison with real legal precedent behind it. The appeals court disagreed, at least provisionally. One interim ruling from one circuit. The Fifth Circuit has jurisdiction over Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi, not the nation. Whether this represents a broader judicial shift toward child safety over speech rights remains genuinely unclear.
Three Other States Are Watching
Louisiana's law mirrors Texas's approach. Utah and California have enacted their own variants, though none have gone live yet. If the Texas law survives ongoing legal challenges, those states have a roadmap. Dating operators could find themselves managing app store-level gates in Texas and potentially three other US states, each with slightly different implementation requirements and timelines.
The compliance infrastructure that worked when rules were relatively uniform doesn't scale when every market has bespoke requirements. Dating operators are already managing different age verification requirements across jurisdictions: Yoti or equivalent in the UK under the Online Safety Act, potential ID checks in EU markets under the Digital Services Act, and now app store-level gates in multiple US states. Each new layer adds cost. None of it comes with a corresponding increase in revenue.
The outcome that should worry operators most isn't Texas alone. It's Texas functioning as proof of concept for a patchwork of state-level regulation that makes user acquisition conversion rates vary significantly by geography. If a 20-year-old in Austin has a meaningfully different experience downloading your app than a 20-year-old in Nashville, your paid acquisition models break. Your forecasting becomes harder. Your cost-per-install diverges across markets in ways that are difficult to predict or optimize around.
What Operators Can Actually Do
Honestly: not much on the technical side. The compliance burden sits with Apple, Google, and developers in terms of app categorization, but the user experience friction is entirely outside dating platforms' control. An app can have the smoothest onboarding flow in the industry and still lose users at the download screen.
Two things are worth doing. First, clearer messaging in acquisition creative that sets expectations about age verification before users click through to the app store. That risks making the process feel more onerous, but it reduces abandonment driven by confusion rather than intent. Second, engagement with industry groups like the Online Dating Association to push for clearer technical distinction between parental consent for minors and age verification for adults, two different mechanisms that current implementations conflate.
The more significant implication isn't Texas. It's the patchwork. Dating operators managing country-level regulation in Europe and state-level regulation in the US are building compliance infrastructure for an increasingly fragmented environment, and that cost compounds every time another jurisdiction passes its own version of the law.
The case returns to court later this year. Until then, dating operators in Texas get to find out whether legislation aimed at protecting children ends up costing them the young adults they actually want to reach. The irony is thick: laws designed to keep minors off adult apps are generating the most friction for the adults those apps are built for.
- Watch for conversion rate divergence across jurisdictions as Texas enforcement data emerges over the next two quarters, that data will inform whether Louisiana, Utah, and California proceed with their own implementations and how aggressively they pursue enforcement.
- Dating platforms face a geographically fragmented user acquisition environment if multiple states adopt app store-level age gates. Model the worst-case scenario now: what does your cost-per-install look like if Texas-style friction applies across four major US markets?
- The compliance burden sits with OS providers, but the commercial cost falls on app developers with no control over the friction being introduced. Industry-level lobbying for clearer technical distinction between minor consent and adult verification is the most productive available response.
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