Commercial activity, such as selling or promoting goods/services or sharing links to subscription services like Patreon or OnlyFans. Recruiting or soliciting for adult entertainment. Providing Venmo, CashApp, PayPal, or other money exchange links for financial support. [1] X Research source Rude or disrespectful behavior, including hate speech, body shaming, racism, misogyny, sexual harassment, bullying, and disrespecting boundaries. Doing anything illegal. Using Bumble to promote your social media accounts or non-Bumble projects. Spamming, which includes sending the same message to everyone you match with—Bumble will think you are a bot. Deleting your account and signing up again multiple times. For a full list of Bumble’s guidelines, visit https://bumble. com/guidelines.

You can also contact Bumble support on Twitter. Their help account is @BumbleSupport, and you can reach them Monday through Thursday, 9 AM-8 PM, and Friday through Sunday 10 AM-6 PM (CST). [2] X Research source

You recently got a used phone or phone number that was connected to a banned account. Your account, phone, or computer is compromised. People think you are catfishing. For example, actress Laverne Cox was banned from another dating app, Hinge, because moderators didn’t believe the profile was really hers. [3] X Research source Retaliation. Some dating app users might get banned because malicious people abuse the “report” feature to get back at them for not responding, blocking them, or reporting harassment. [4] X Research source Moderators (or an algorithm) mistakenly thought you were advertising a service.

Reddit users who’ve been banned by Bumble suggest that Bumble uses facial recognition to detect banned users. This means that even if your photos are different from the ones you were using at the time you were banned, they can still be linked to your old photos. [6] X Research source