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Economics · BLS Data

What Percentage of Men Actually Make $100K+, and Other Uncomfortable Arithmetic

By The GoodLuckDating.com Editorial Staff · 8 min read · Data: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Census

The $100,000 income filter is the most popular setting on modern dating apps and also, by the numbers, one of the most quietly devastating. So let’s say the part out loud that the apps won’t: how many men actually clear it?

~18%
of men earn $100,000+ in personal income (approx., BLS/Census)
~8.5%
clear a $150,000 floor
~5%
clear $200,000

Read that first number again. A six-figure income requirement, applied honestly, removes roughly four out of five men from the pool before personality, looks, height, hobbies, or basic kindness ever enter the conversation. It’s not a preference at that point; it’s a turnstile that ejects 82% of arrivals.

The compounding nobody pictures

Here’s the trap: income rarely travels alone. The same profile that requires $100k+ usually also wants a certain height, a certain age, no kids, and a 25-mile radius. Each is reasonable in isolation. Stacked, they multiply — and because high earners are not evenly distributed across height, age, and geography, the overlaps are worse than the individual percentages suggest. The man who is six feet tall, earns $150k, lives within 25 miles, and is single in your age band is not 8.5% of the pool. He’s a rounding error with a LinkedIn.

The ArithmeticIf a $100k floor leaves ~18% of men, and your height requirement keeps ~15%, and your radius keeps ~30%, the combined survivors are roughly 0.18 × 0.15 × 0.30 — under 1% of single men in your area, before you’ve evaluated whether you’d actually enjoy a single one of them.

What the data suggests instead

  • Lower the floor to $50,000–$75,000. The share of men clearing $50k is roughly double those clearing $100k. You are not “settling” — you are declining to discard half the field over a number most people round up on their profile anyway.
  • Trade income for stability signals. “Employed, solvent, and not chaotic” describes a far larger and frankly more reliable pool than “six figures.”
  • Pick income OR another hard filter, not both. You get one or two turnstiles before the room empties. Spend them deliberately.

And yes, the same math applies in reverse and to every gender and preference — income is simply the cleanest example because the BLS publishes it and the dating apps weaponize it. The point isn’t that standards are bad. It’s that each one has a price, the price is multiplicative, and almost nobody is told the bill until now.

Run your own numbers →

Sources: U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey; Bureau of Labor Statistics; CDC / NCHS; Pew Research Center. Figures are approximations assembled for commentary and entertainment. Satire intended. Accuracy unintentional.