The Iranian-American entrepreneur who built Tinder changed how a generation connects — and then spent years fighting to get it back.
Early life and background
Sean Rad was born and raised in Los Angeles, California to Iranian-Jewish immigrant parents who immigrated to the United States in the 1970s. Rad’s family had a consumer electronics business started by his grandfather, giving Rad a glimpse into entrepreneurship and business from an early age. The Rad household, a large, close-knit clan—by some accounts he has 42 first cousins—instilled values of independence and ambition from childhood.
Rad attended a private school in Los Angeles for high school, where he dabbled in music and started a band, and interned for an entertainment manager before deciding the entertainment industry was not for him. Instead, his restless curiosity looked to technology and the emerging internet economy.
Rad attended University of Southern California in 2004 to study business. He made it two years, until 2006, when he dropped out to start companies, not study them.
Sean Rad Biography
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Sean Rad |
| Date of Birth | May 22, 1986 (Age 40 in 2026) |
| Birthplace | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
| Ethnicity/Religion | Iranian Jewish heritage |
| Education | University of Southern California (dropped out in 2006) |
| Spouse | Lizzie Grover (married 2018) |
| Family Background | Parents emigrated from Iran in the 1970s; large extended family with 42 first cousins |
| Early Ventures | Founded Orgoo (2004), a unified messaging/video platform |
| Major Companies Founded | Ad.ly (2009, celebrity endorsement platform), Tinder (2012), Happy Ring, YYX Ventures |
| Tinder Launch | September 2012; introduced “double opt-in” swipe-based dating system |
| Patents | Holds 15 patents, including Tinder’s double opt-in matching system |
| Angel Investments | Portfolio includes 16 companies (e.g., Hike, micro1, CommanderAI) |
| Residence | West Hollywood, California, U.S. |
The years before Tinder
Before Tinder made him a star, Rad had been racking up startup experience. His first startup, Orgoo, started when he was just 18 in 2004. The service was intended to combine email, instant messaging, video chat and SMS into one web-based application – a concept that was ahead of its time, but never caught on. It was a learning experience in product development, user behaviour and the difficulty of startup execution.
His next attempt was more successful. Rad started developing Adly in 2009, a social media advertising and analytics platform that connected celebrities and brands together. Eventually, the service connected more than 2,500 brands with more than 5,000 celebrity influencers, pioneering what would become a massive industry. Rad later sold Adly to a private equity firm, an early indication of his ability to spot and capitalize on cultural trends.
Tinder Founding and
Tinder was born out of a very personal observation. Rad believed asymmetric risk was inhibiting human connection — the fear of approaching someone who might not return the interest. His insight was that a “double opt-in” mechanism, requiring mutual interest before any contact, could slice that anxiety like a knife. That became the founding logic of Tinder.
Rad partnered with Joe Munoz to create a prototype called Matchbox for an internal hackathon at IAC’s startup incubator, Hatch Labs. The prototype won out. The team—now Jonathan Badeen, Justin Mateen, Dinesh Moorjani and Whitney Wolfe—spent three weeks turning Matchbox into a finished app, and re-branded it Tinder, for an initial investment of $50,000.
Launched in September 2012, Tinder spread across college campuses with remarkable speed. The app pioneered the swiping gesture that has become ubiquitous – left to pass, right to express interest – and popularized the “swipe app” category. By October 2014, users were swiping more than a billion times a day, generating around 12 million matches every 24 hours. “Average time per user on the platform was about 90 minutes per day.
In 2015, Tinder was the highest grossing app in 99 countries. In 2017, it was the number 1 on Apple’s App Store worldwide. The company ultimately achieved annual revenues of an estimated $1.4 billion, and Rad holds 15 patents related to his work there, including the patent for the double opt-in matching system.
Sean Rad Net Worth 2026
| Year | Estimated Net Worth |
|---|---|
| 2022 | $28.7 million |
| 2023 | $33.5 million |
| 2024 | $38.3 million |
| 2025 | $43.1 million |
| 2026 | $47.9 million |
Lead and leave
Rad was Tinder’s first CEO, leading the company through its most explosive growth after the app launched. He was replaced in March 2015 by former eBay and Microsoft executive Chris Payne. Payne’s tenure was short-lived, with Rad returning as CEO after just five months in August 2015. He resigned for a second time in December 2016, assuming the position of chairman before leaving the company altogether in 2017 after a disagreement with parent company Match Group and IAC over Tinder’s valuation.
The legal battle with IAC/Match Group
Rad, who departed Tinder, was at the center of one of Silicon Valley’s most high-profile legal battles between a founder and a corporation. In August 2018, Rad and other members of Tinder’s founding team sued IAC and Match Group, claiming the companies had secretly undervalued Tinder in 2017 to lower the payout on employee stock options. The lawsuit initially sought damages of at least $2 billion, with the founders saying the companies had painted a “false picture” of Tinder’s finances and resulting in what they called a fraudulent $3 billion valuation — a fraction of the app’s worth.
IAC and Match Group filed their own counter-suit, accusing Rad of copying company proprietary files and seeking at least $250 million in damages. Over the next few years the legal battle became more and more complicated with new claims and counter-allegations and changing plaintiffs. The dispute was settled in late 2021 with Match Group agreeing to pay $441 million to settle, using cash on hand.
Philanthropy and other later activities
In October 2019, at the Forbes Under 30 Summit, Rad announced a new direction. He launched Good Today, a nonprofit web app that simplifies charitable giving, allowing people to donate small amounts daily to a rotating list of vetted charities. The platform is a mirror of Rad’s expressed desire to create systems that reduce the friction of prosocial behavior, employing the same design style he used to bring people together at Tinder.
Rad married Lizzie Grover in 2018 . He’s been on the boards of Good Today and AllVoices, a platform built to give employees a safe way to report on the job. He is still one of the most studied and referenced entrepreneurs in history of consumer internet products.
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