Send Me 5 And See What Happens
Also known as: Tinder $5 Scam · Send Me $5
"Send Me $5 and See What Happens" is a Tinder prank that went viral in March 2017, started by 20-year-old college student Maggie Archer from St. Louis, Missouri. Archer put "send me $5, see what happens" in her Tinder bio, collected PayPal payments from curious matches, then immediately unmatched them. The scheme blew up on Twitter and got covered by BuzzFeed, Men's Health, and other outlets before Tinder shut it down for violating their terms of service.
Overview
The setup was beautifully simple. Archer wrote "send me $5, see what happens" in her Tinder bio. When matches asked what they'd get for five bucks, she directed them to her PayPal with a "send and find out"2. After the money came through, she unmatched them instantly. No conversation, no date, no explanation. Just gone.
The prank worked because Archer technically promised nothing. As she told BuzzFeed: "It's really a foolproof plan, because I'm not actually promising anything. I just say 'see what happens'"1. About one in five of her matches took the bait, and more than 20 men sent her at least $5 within a single week2.
On March 22, 2017, Archer posted screenshots of her scheme to Twitter, calling it "the best possible use for Tinder"5. The tweet showed her bio, message exchanges with confused matches, and the aftermath of unmatching. It picked up 8,700 retweets and 21,000 likes5.
Archer told BuzzFeed News that a friend originally suggested the bio line as a joke1. She tried it mostly for laughs but kept going when men started sending money almost immediately. The most anyone sent was $10, though she said some matches got "creepy and assume if they offer a lot more, like hundreds, something will actually happen, which of course it doesn't"1.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The original format followed three steps:
Set your Tinder (or dating app) bio to something like "send me $5, see what happens"
When a match asks about it, share your PayPal/Venmo/Cash App and say "send and find out"
After receiving the money, unmatch without explanation
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Archer's friend originally suggested the bio line. She only kept it because it worked on the very first try.
Roughly one in five male matches actually sent money.
The most anyone paid was $10. Archer said some offered hundreds but she never followed through on those either.
Archer had already uninstalled Tinder before she received the official ban email.
Screenshots of the prank were shared on 4chan, where they were compiled into a collage.
Derivatives & Variations
Copycat Tinder bios:
After the story went viral, women across Twitter posted their own versions of the "$5 bio" prank, with some adjusting the amount or adding their own twist[4].
r/Tinder documentation:
Reddit users began posting screenshots of encounters with "$5 and see what happens" copycats, turning the prank into a recognized dating app trope[5].
Venmo/Cash App variations:
As payment apps evolved, later iterations swapped PayPal for Venmo or Cash App links in dating profiles, keeping the same basic structure[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (11)
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- 4Send Me $5 and See What Happens - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia
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- 11