HER is the world’s largest safe space for all trans women, trans men and folks outside the gender binary. We’re the dating app designed to help you meet your person; to chat with, hook up with or fall in love with.
Made by sapphics for sapphics, HER has the most extensive gender and sexuality labels of any dating app, including Pride Pins to express your identity like Trans Pride, T4T, QTPOC and unique filters to make sure you’re connecting with the right person for you.
Meet and date transgender women or trans men! Your next match is a tap away
Apple Editor’s Choice 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019
A dedicated trust and safety team is ready to assist you anytime
Meet people with your same interests in one of HER’s 35+ community groups
At HER, we’re designed to celebrate trans love! We know very well that for trans love to flourish — we needed to make sure that we created a safe and fun dating environment that took the needs (and wants) of the trans community seriously. We understand the importance of providing a judgment-free environment where trans men and women can truly be their most authentic selves without fear.
We’ve taken a strong stance against TERFs (including getting banned from X because of our commitment to this) and are constantly dedicating time and resources to make HER a TERF-free space.
Every feature on HER is meticulously designed to enhance the dating experience for transgender and non-binary people and queer women, prioritizing their safety and comfort.
Unlike mainstream dating apps primarily catering to cisgender men, HER is locked in and focused on creating a space that’s tailored to the interests, passions, and desires of every member of our rainbow alphabet. A standout feature on HER is the introduction of Pride Pins, allowing users to express their identities and preferences clearly.
Whether you’re T4T dating, QPOC, Andro, Butch, enby, Chapstick Lesbian, Femme, or Intersex, you can showcase your uniqueness. And sharing about your connection and romantic styles, from love languages to sexual preferences, we’re here to help you find the right partner for you.
Concerned about safety on HER? Rest assure! Our dedicated trust and safety team is committed to ensuring a secure environment for all LGBTQIA+ individuals. We understand the unique challenges that transgender people face in the dating world, and we’re here to support you every step of the way.
Each user undergoes verification by linking their profile to a social media account and completing a photo verification process, enhancing authenticity and reducing the risk of encountering catfishers or unwelcome advances. Our vigilant team of safety moderators diligently monitors the platform to uphold respectful interactions and promptly address any issues that may arise.
As a queer team, we deeply understand and recognize the importance of providing a safe and inclusive space for trans individuals, who often face discrimination and harassment on other dating platforms and sites. If you ever come across something that doesn’t sit quite right, you can report a profile or interaction to our team, and we’ll immediately investigate the situation to make sure HER remains as safe and iconic as possible.
We have a clear internal team mandate to remove TERFs from HER – we’re deeply committed to making this an inclusive and welcoming space for our community, and discrimination is not something that will be tolerated.
By prioritizing data safety and privacy through a thorough verification process and fostering a welcoming environment, HER stands out as a beacon of inclusivity and empowerment in trans dating.
Join HER today and discover a space where you can truly be yourself without compromise.
HER isn’t just another free TS dating app — it’s a safe space where trans people like you can build forever bonds and friendships with folks who share your passions and interests!
HER’s Communities is one of our most unique and exciting features! In the app, you’ll be able to join 35+ different communities and socially engage with other vibrant queer people in a fun, safe, and supportive environment.
For our transgender users, we’ve created dedicated spaces for non-binary people, trans women and trans men so you can get advice and share thoughts, tips, and feelings with other members of the community.
Join the support, excitement and sense of abundance in our thriving HER community today.
Forget exploding cars and satellite feeds. The "spy craft" here is terrifyingly mundane: a missed password, a wrong glance at a checkpoint, a SIM card hidden in a loaf of bread. Director Rebar Khidir wisely uses the geography of Northern Iraq—half-constructed buildings, dusty wadis , and crowded IDP camps—as a labyrinthine stage.
The term is clearly ambiguous, and breaking it down helps clarify the possible meanings:
the 2015 intelligence landscape to the current tensions in 2026. spy 2015 kurdish top
Intelligence agencies from Iran and Turkey intensified their efforts to monitor and arrest Kurdish political activists deemed a threat. [9]
In the annals of modern espionage, few years were as volatile or as consequential as . While Western headlines focused on the rise of ISIS and the refugee crisis, a silent, brutal shadow war was unfolding across the mountains of Northern Iraq and Syria. For intelligence agencies—ranging from the Turkish MIT (National Intelligence Organization) to Iranian VEVAK and even the American CIA—2015 was the year that Kurdish leadership became the highest-priority target. Forget exploding cars and satellite feeds
She travels across European hubs like Rome and Budapest wearing baggy, floral-printed blouses and unstructured shirts meant to render her invisible to high-society arms dealers.
In 2015, Turkish authorities arrested several Kurdish individuals in Turkey and Europe, accusing them of spying for the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG). The PKK and YPG are Kurdish militant organizations that have been involved in the Syrian Civil War and the Turkey-PKK conflict. The term is clearly ambiguous, and breaking it
The "Kurdish Top" represents a specific archetype: the Intermediary . Unlike a standard mole, this operative likely held legitimacy within the Kurdish political structure while feeding information to an external power (likely Western intelligence).
This paper identifies the "Autumn of Chaos" (Sept-Dec 2015) as the termination phase of the 2015 spy cycle. Curfews were imposed, and communication lines were severed. The "Top" faced the ultimate risk: exposure. Intelligence reports from the era suggest several high-profile assets were "burned" during this time, either leaked to ISIS to disrupt Western networks or detained by Turkish authorities under anti-terror laws.
What did a “top spy” look like in the Kurdish context of 2015? Unlike the cinematic image of a suave double agent, these assets were typically: