
An Honest Review of Kndrd (2026)
I applied to Kndrd on a Sunday night after seeing it mentioned in a TikTok comment section. Two weeks later, I got the approval email. Two weeks after that, I'd joined a rooftop yoga class, gone to a concert in Brooklyn with three strangers, and found a new running partner. But getting there took some patience, and the app has real limitations that are worth talking about.
How It Works
Kndrd (pronounced "kindred") works differently from most social apps. There's no matching algorithm. Nobody is assigned to your group. Instead, members post plans. Real, specific plans. "Running the Central Park loop Saturday at 8 AM." "Checking out that new Thai place in the East Village, Thursday at 7." "Going to the Bad Bunny concert, need a crew." You browse the plans, join the ones that sound good, and a group chat opens up so everyone can coordinate.
The catch is that you can't just download the app and start browsing. Every member goes through a manual review process. The Kndrd team looks at your application and decides whether to let you in. I waited about two weeks. Some people I've talked to waited longer. The idea is that by keeping the community small and vetted, the quality stays high.
What I Liked
The plan-first model makes everything easier
On most social apps, matching is the easy part. The hard part is the "so... what should we do?" conversation that follows. Kndrd skips that entirely. Every interaction starts with a plan that already exists. I'm not trying to convince a stranger to hang out with me. I'm joining a yoga class that someone already organized. The activity is the icebreaker. The pressure to be interesting or charming is almost zero because you're just doing a thing together.
The community feels real
I've used apps where the user base feels anonymous and disposable. Kndrd doesn't feel that way. Because everyone went through the same approval process, there's an implicit trust. People show up when they say they will. Conversations in the group chats are warm and specific. The Forum section, where people post recommendations and ask questions, actually has useful content in it. Someone asked for a dentist recommendation last week and got twelve genuine responses. That kind of thing doesn't happen on most apps.
It's completely free
No subscription. No premium tier. No paywalls hiding the good features. I keep waiting for the catch and so far there isn't one. Everything on Kndrd is free to use. Coming from apps that charge $15-40/month for basic functionality, this is notable.
What I Didn't Like
NYC only
If you don't live in New York, stop reading. Kndrd is only available in NYC and there's no timeline for expanding to other cities. This is the app's biggest weakness and its biggest constraint on growth. Everyone I've mentioned Kndrd to who lives outside New York has the same reaction: "That sounds great, let me know when it comes to my city."
It skews heavily female
The Kndrd community is mostly women. The app's marketing leans into this, and the plans people post reflect it: yoga, brunch, book clubs, wine bars. That's fine if that's what you're looking for. But if you're a guy hoping for a mixed-gender social experience, or if you're looking for activities that skew more co-ed, Kndrd probably isn't your best bet. There are occasional mixed plans, but the default vibe is women's social club.
The approval wait
Two weeks felt like a long time. I understand why they do it. Vetting keeps the community tight and reduces the chance of creepy or spammy behavior. But in a world where every other app gives you instant access, making people wait two weeks is a gamble. I know people who applied, forgot about it, and never came back when they got approved. The friction is intentional, but it costs them users.
Plan quality depends on the community
Kndrd doesn't organize events. Members do. That means the variety and quality of available plans depends entirely on who's active on the app at any given time. Some weeks I'd open the app and see a dozen interesting options. Other weeks, the pickings were thin. If the user base ever dips or the active members get busy, the whole app slows down. There's no institutional backbone to fall back on.
Who Should Try Kndrd
Women in New York who want to find friends through shared activities. People who are tired of the swipe-and-chat model and want to just do something with new people. Anyone who values a vetted, trustworthy community over a massive, anonymous user base.
If you're not in NYC, if you're looking for co-ed groups, or if you don't have patience for an approval process, look elsewhere. Meetup and Bumble BFF are both available everywhere and let you start immediately.
The Verdict
Kndrd is small and intentional in a way that most social apps aren't. It feels less like an app and more like a group chat with people who actually want to hang out. The plan-based model is smart, the community is warm, and the price (free) is right. Its limitations are real: NYC only, mostly women, slow onboarding. But for the people it's built for, it works. I've made two friends through Kndrd that I now see regularly outside the app. For a social platform, that's about the best outcome you can ask for.

