
This UMass Lowell student gets straight to the point with her PayPal information and Snapchat handle already in her bio. Using this hashtag search strategy, I stumbled across the Instagram account of Quyen Bui, better known as on Instagram. RT if you need a sugar daddy like this? /WF3X3j7TxD I’m dying to know what the process of sliding into those DMs are like. Search hashtags like “sugar baby,” “sugar daddy,” and more, and you’ll find a relatively easy-to-navigate sugar dating community. Still, if you’re already a sugar baby or considering becoming one, it probably can’t hurt to try.įittingly, Instagram has become a go-to platform to find and become a sugar baby.
#Sugar daddy websites without meeting how to#
There aren’t figures on how many sugar babies only communicate digitally, but recent online threads offer tips on how to finesse this sort of arrangement, though according to some forums, your odds of securing this type of arrangement are low. It’s not hard to understand why a rich guy would want to keep his secret gift-receiving girlfriend from his wife, and refusing to meet up offers an added layer of protection (and shadiness).


On top of that, it’s not uncommon to end up with a married sugar daddy, to the point that there are blog posts dedicated to this very scenario. (And again, I say: where can I find these rich benefactors who will FaceTime me for cash?) It makes sense that, in an age where online dating is ever-popular, that people would want their communication to happen online, too. While this may sound a little extreme (meaning, who on Earth can afford or would want to pay hundreds of dollars just to hear someone’s voice?), the practice is becoming more popular than you might think. Instead of being physically wined and dined like traditional sugar babies, digital ones simply look for someone who’s willing to pay money to hear their voice over the phone, video chat, or even just message back-and-forth. Me after successfully kill my sugar daddy and obtain his will /bkulsMg7Mpīasically, being a digitally exclusive sugar baby means that these college students will either find a sugar daddy (or mommy) on their own, they will be found by one, or they can be matched using one of the many online sugar dating applications. Why do in person what you can do from your phone, right? Now, though, there are a growing number of sugar babies who are going digital and not meeting up with their daddies/mommas at all. Basically, the idea is that sugar babies “accompany” daddies (to dinner, events, dinners, or whatever) and can receive money, gifts, etc. In case you’ve been living under a rock, sugar babies, according to the SeekingArrangement website, “enjoy a life of luxury by being pampered with fine dinners, exotic trips and allowances.” Sugar Daddies or Mommas (those terms just gave me hives) want to “find beautiful members to accompany them at all times.” So, using services like SeekingArrangement, they link up. But just like millennials and Gen-Z have different outlooks on social media, dating, and drinking than other generations, they’re also approaching the sugar babying world differently, getting a little more technologically savvy. According to SeekingArrangement’s report, aptly called Sugar Baby University, more than 2.7 million college students have turned to sugar daddies to help pay off debt or offset other costs, like books and housing.

When beginning to search for digital gigs that require little effort but that offer great financial reward, more and more college-age students are jumping on the sugar baby bandwagon. So long to the days of having to physically go to work, because who wants to do that? Let’s be real, nobody, but especially not college kids. (My diet became 80 percent Mexican food, which I now realize is not the best weight loss strategy.)Įight years later, the internet and a growing number of applications have created a limitless number of ways for students to make money online, without having to ever leave their beds. For me, this came down to blowing all of my scholarship money my freshman year, and then turning to waitressing at Mexican restaurants so I could afford to feed myself. When I began college in 2011, being able to survive financially meant either A) having rich parents, B) surviving off scholarships, C) falling into bottomless debt, or D) getting a part-time job.
