Set your social baseline
Add your interests, languages, and how far you are willing to go. The profile is lightweight but enough to make matching useful.
Usually takes less than two minutes.
Bridgit lines up the who, what, when, and where so it takes minutes to go from “I should do something” to a real activity with the right people.
90 sec
to set your preferences
Private
profiles until there is a match
Public-first
first meetups by default
No public browsing and no profile feed for strangers.
Intentional suggestions replace endless scrolling and ghosting.
Every interaction points toward an actual activity, not a chat loop.
Bridgit reduces the flow to the inputs that matter and handles the matching work behind the scenes. You provide signal. The product creates momentum.
You control
Interests, timing, preferred activity style, and travel comfort.
Bridgit handles
Match ranking, schedule fit, private intros, and guardrails for first meetings.
Add your interests, languages, and how far you are willing to go. The profile is lightweight but enough to make matching useful.
Usually takes less than two minutes.
Tell Bridgit when you are actually free so it stops showing activities that look good but never happen.
No more “maybe next week” dead ends.
Nearby plans, sensible timing, and the right type of energy come together in one ranked set of options.
You can host or join from the same flow.
Once there is a fit, the app opens the right chat with the right people instead of starting from random cold outreach.
Venue details stay scoped to matched people.
The goal is a real plan in the real world. After that, Bridgit should feel almost invisible.
Less feed time. More actual doing.
Bridgit is most useful when it takes emotional overhead off your plate. That means less coordination friction, less empty chatting, and a clearer path to actually doing something.
Set your availability once and let the product stop suggesting people who can never actually meet you.
Bridgit starts from a shared activity, which means the conversation already has a reason to exist.
The matching system is built around fit and timing, not public profiles and shallow swiping.
Bridgit is built around public-first meetups, limited visibility, and clearer accountability so new connections feel lower-risk from the beginning.
Your profile and activity details are hidden from random browsing.
First plans default to public venues and the app keeps context tight.
No open browsing, no public profile grid, and no venue details for strangers.
The product is intentionally opinionated about first-meeting safety.
Verification, blocking, and reporting are part of the core system, not add-ons.
Set preferences, manage visibility, and decide which matches move forward.
“Life is too short to miss things you want to do just because you do not know who to go with.”
Bridgit exists for the gap between wanting a social life and having the energy to organize one. It focuses on activity-based connection instead of public browsing, posting, or maintaining a social feed.
That shift changes the entire interface. The right questions become: what do you want to do, when are you actually free, how far are you willing to go, and what kind of people would make this feel easy?
Once those inputs are clear, the rest of the app can get out of your way and point toward a real plan.
Interests matter, but timing and energy matter too. Bridgit ranks for the whole plan, not a single attribute.
The product uses availability as a first-class input so you stop wasting attention on impossible options.
Private defaults and public-first meetups make the product feel more grounded than an open social feed.
Product principle
A social app should help you leave the app sooner.
Join Bridgit to find activity partners through timing, interests, and private-by-default matching instead of another endless feed.