Hinge founder leaves CEO role to launch AI-powered dating startup

C

CNBC Finance

Dec 09, 2025

2 min read

Download Gold Price Tracker & Alerts

Get the app to explore more features and stay updated

Key Points
  • Hinge founder Justin McLeod is stepping down as CEO of the dating app to launch an AI-powered dating service.
  • McLeod will be replaced by Jackie Jantos, the dating app's president and chief marketing officer, Hinge parent company Match Group announced on Tuesday.
  • In early 2026, Match Group plans to lead the initial funding round for McLeod's new venture, called Overtone. The startup will use AI and voice tools to "help people connect."
Justin McLeod speaks during the Fast Company Innovation Festival 2025 on Sept. 18, 2025 in New York City.
Eugene Gologursky | Getty Images

Hinge founder Justin McLeod is stepping down as CEO of the dating app to launch a dating service powered by artificial intelligence.

McLeod will be replaced by Jackie Jantos, the dating app's president and chief marketing officer, Hinge parent company Match Group announced on Tuesday.

"The company's momentum, including being on track to reach $1 billion in revenue by 2027, gives me full confidence in where Hinge is headed," said McLeod in a statement. He created the dating app in 2011.

McLeod will remain as an advisor to Hinge through March. Overtone, his new venture, will use AI and voice tools to "help people connect in a more thoughtful and personal way," according to the announcement.

Along with a dedicated team, McLeod spent much of this year developing the startup with support from Match Group, which said it plans to lead Overtone's initial funding round in early 2026.

Match Group, which also owns Tinder and various other dating apps, will hold a significant ownership position in Overtone. Match Group CEO Spencer Rascoff will join Overtone's board.

"We're proud to have incubated Overtone within Hinge and to now lead its funding round as he builds his next venture," Rascoff said in a statement.

WATCH: Software could start benefitting from AI in 2026, says Intelligent Alpha CEO Doug Clinton

Published

December 09, 2025

Tuesday at 10:41 PM

Reading Time

2 minutes

~302 words

More Articles

Explore other insights and stories

Jan 21, 2026 CNBC Finance

Amazon launches AI health-care tool for One Medical members

The service uses large language models and references patients medical records to answer questions, manage medications and book appointments.

Read Article
Jan 21, 2026 CNBC Finance

OpenAI, Anthropic set sights on enterprise customers at Davos

Enterprise customers account for roughly 40% of OpenAI's business and 80% of Anthropic's business.

Read Article
Jan 21, 2026 CNBC Finance

Trump tells world leaders: Europe is not heading in the right direction

U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday said some areas of Europe are no longer recognizable — and "not in a positive way."

Read Article