NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
IranStrikesIsraeliCrisisPakistanMilitaryMarchTimelineIranianConflictConceptDigestDisruptionsRegionalProtestsPricesLaunchGulfGovernmentDiplomaticSecurityTargetsSupremeHormuz
IranStrikesIsraeliCrisisPakistanMilitaryMarchTimelineIranianConflictConceptDigestDisruptionsRegionalProtestsPricesLaunchGulfGovernmentDiplomaticSecurityTargetsSupremeHormuz
All Articles
Eager China parents use apps to find partners for adult children, turn pairing into transactions
South China Morning Post
Published about 2 hours ago

Eager China parents use apps to find partners for adult children, turn pairing into transactions

South China Morning Post · Mar 2, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

Anxious Chinese parents are increasingly turning to “find a daughter-in-law” or “find a son-in-law” platforms online, turning partner seeking into direct negotiations between parents. During the Chinese New Year, as young people fend off probing questions about marriage and relationships from relatives at the dinner table, sharp-eyed businesses have already shifted their strategies. Instead of trying to persuade single young adults who resist matchmaking, they are now directly targeting a...

Full Article

Anxious Chinese parents are increasingly turning to “find a daughter-in-law” or “find a son-in-law” platforms online, turning partner seeking into direct negotiations between parents.During the Chinese New Year, as young people fend off probing questions about marriage and relationships from relatives at the dinner table, sharp-eyed businesses have already shifted their strategies.Instead of trying to persuade single young adults who resist matchmaking, they are now directly targeting a different demographic: anxious parents with strong purchasing power.People read résumés at a traditional matchmaking corner in China. Photo: ShutterstockAn increasing number of online platforms branded as ‘matching future in-laws’ have emerged.Traditionally, China’s matchmaking corners are weekend in-person outdoor marriage markets, where parents display handwritten résumés of their unmarried children in the hope of finding suitable partners.Now, online platforms allow parents to ‘select a son- or daughter-in-law’ from the comfort of their homes while quietly monetising parental anxiety.On these platforms, the first step for new users is to define their goal: “looking for a daughter-in-law” or “looking for a son-in-law”.


Share this story

Read Original at South China Morning Post

Related Articles

South China Morning Post6 minutes ago
Middle East conflict to drive up airfares for Hong Kong travellers: analysts

The escalating conflict in the Middle East is set to drive up travel costs for Hong Kong passengers as many are forced to opt for more expensive direct routes to Europe, according to analysts. They said on Monday that the suspension of major transit hubs in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Doha in Qatar had left travellers scrambling for seats on direct flights or “conflict-free” paths to Europe, with surging demand set to trigger a spike in airfares. Global air travel has been...

South China Morning Post6 minutes ago
Iran conflict will accelerate China’s push to become an ‘energy powerhouse’, analysts say

The escalating conflict in the Middle East – which is sending oil prices soaring and disrupting shipping traffic along the Strait of Hormuz – should not pose an immediate threat to China’s crude supply, but will add urgency to the country’s energy security drive, analysts said. Since the United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran over the weekend, commercial traffic has largely come to a standstill along the Strait of Hormuz – a waterway linking the Persian Gulf with the Indian Ocean...

South China Morning Post33 minutes ago
Why wait? China should skip a step in self-driving cars, Xpeng founder and CEO says

The head of Chinese electric vehicle (EV) maker Xpeng said the country should accelerate the development of autonomous driving technology amid slowing sales growth in the sector. He Xiaopeng, founder and CEO of the Guangzhou-based company, said on Monday that the country should skip an intermediate step and move directly to a more advanced version of autonomous capabilities, adding that Beijing should adjust regulations and policies faster to make this happen. He said he would submit this...

South China Morning Postabout 1 hour ago
Mainland Chinese firm to build Northern Metropolis supercomputing centre

A mainland Chinese firm has secured the tender to build a supercomputing centre in Hong Kong’s Northern Metropolis as the sole bidder, agreeing to pay a premium of HK$581 million (US$74.25 million) and boost the city’s computing power 36-fold. Unveiling details of the plan on Monday, Secretary for Innovation, Technology and Industry Sun Dong said the winning bidder was Range Intelligent Computing Technology, whose parent company, Shenzhen-listed Runze Technology Group, specialises in developing...

South China Morning Postabout 1 hour ago
Singapore strives to remain equidistant amid US-China rivalry: ‘same-same but different’

Singapore’s long-standing effort to stay equidistant between the United States and China is entering a more volatile phase, with recent comments by officials reflecting their awareness of the mounting strain, analysts have said. Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan on Friday told parliament that Singapore would not act as a proxy for any major power, stressing that the city state must be prepared to “courteously stand up and say no”. Observers say his remarks come at a time when geopolitical...

South China Morning Postabout 1 hour ago
South China Sea expert warns 2026 code of conduct is ‘simply not achievable’

A veteran South China Sea expert has cast doubt on the prospects of finalising a code of conduct for the contested waters this year, even as ties between rival claimants Beijing and Manila show signs of improvement. Wu Shicun, founding president of the National Institute for South China Sea Studies, said it was “100 per cent not likely” that the document would be signed this year as the Philippines takes over the rotating chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean). “I believe it...