Instagram Is Becoming a Reels App. Every Dating Brand That Ignored Short-Form Video Just Ran Out of Time.
    Regulatory Monitor

    Instagram Is Becoming a Reels App. Every Dating Brand That Ignored Short-Form Video Just Ran Out of Time.

    ·6 min read
    • Meta is testing an Instagram redesign that opens directly to Reels and introduces a customisable feed hub
    • Users are sharing 3.5 billion Reels daily across Facebook and Instagram, with 50% of Instagram time spent on short-form video
    • Dating brands still relying on static imagery face declining organic reach as the platform architecturally subordinates photo posts
    • The redesign makes video the default entry point, turning all other content formats into opt-in experiences

    The Instagram marketing playbook dating operators have relied on for years—aspirational couples, polished lifestyle shots, carousel testimonials—is about to become structurally obsolete. Meta is testing a redesign that opens Instagram directly to Reels and introduces a customisable feed hub, cementing short-form video as the platform's primary content format. For dating brands still investing in static imagery, the message is clear: adapt to vertical video now, or accept declining organic reach.

    According to leaked screenshots shared by reverse engineering specialist Alessandro Paluzzi, the redesign makes Reels the default entry point when users open Instagram. A new central navigation button leads to a 'Your Feeds' hub, where users can swipe between multiple Reels-focused streams including Following, Favourites, Recent, Saved, and Explore. Photo posts and carousels aren't disappearing—Instagram head Adam Mosseri has repeatedly insisted they remain core to the platform—but they're being architecturally subordinated.

    Smartphone displaying social media reels interface
    Smartphone displaying social media reels interface
    When an app opens to video by default, everything else becomes opt-in.

    The shift reflects user behaviour that's already happened. Meta disclosed in late 2024 that users were sharing 3.5 billion Reels daily across Facebook and Instagram, with 50% of time spent in Instagram dedicated to short-form video. Those figures predate this redesign, which suggests Meta is responding to demonstrated preference rather than attempting to manufacture it. Instagram has previously tested opening to Reels for heavy video users, but making it the universal default represents a structural commitment.

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    The DII Take

    Dating apps have spent years building Instagram presences optimised for a platform that's about to deprioritise the content they're best at producing. Brands that haven't yet developed fluency in short-form video—and many haven't—face a choice: invest meaningfully in Reels production or accept that their Instagram presence will increasingly function as a brochure rather than an acquisition channel. The operators who've already integrated video into their in-app experiences have a head start, but Instagram's format demands different pacing, editing, and storytelling than app-native features.

    This isn't a minor tactical adjustment. It's a reset.

    Why the photo playbook is dying

    Dating operators have historically used Instagram for brand-building through carefully curated static content: success stories presented as carousel testimonials, aspirational lifestyle photography that positions the app within desirable social contexts, and founder-led posts that humanise the brand. This approach worked because Instagram's algorithm and interface design gave static posts meaningful organic reach and extended shelf life through Explore and hashtag discovery.

    The Reels-first redesign breaks that model. When users open Instagram directly into a video feed, static posts become something you have to navigate away from the default experience to find. The 'Your Feeds' hub theoretically preserves access to photo content through options like Following and Recent, but requiring users to actively select a non-default feed introduces friction that will inevitably reduce exposure.

    Person holding smartphone filming video content
    Person holding smartphone filming video content

    This creates a particular challenge for dating brands because the content that performs in Reels differs fundamentally from what works in static posts. Testimonials need to be delivered in under 15 seconds with hook-driven pacing. Aspirational lifestyle content requires movement, transitions, and trending audio to gain algorithmic favour. Founder-led storytelling demands camera presence and editing rhythm that not every executive possesses.

    Operators like Tinder and Bumble have spent years integrating short-form video into their in-app experiences—profile videos, prompt-based clips, video chat features—but their Instagram presences still lean heavily on traditional formats. Bumble's Instagram feed remains dominated by static graphics and carousels presenting dating advice and brand messaging. Tinder mixes Reels into its strategy but maintains significant investment in photo posts. Both approaches made sense when Instagram's interface treated video and photos as co-equal formats.

    What shifts now

    The immediate impact will be felt in organic reach. Dating brands that continue producing primarily static content should expect declining engagement as Instagram's algorithm and interface design compound to favour video. Paid social strategies may need revision as well—if Meta's ad products increasingly prioritise Reels placements, cost-per-acquisition economics could shift for advertisers still optimising for feed-based creative.

    Niche and vertical dating operators face a particular calculation. Many have built Instagram audiences through highly specific visual aesthetics—luxury dating apps positioning through polished photography, community-focused platforms using user-generated static content, values-driven brands relying on text-heavy carousel posts. Translating these identities into Reels-native content requires different creative capabilities and potentially different creator relationships.

    Video production equipment and mobile phone setup
    Video production equipment and mobile phone setup

    The redesign may also accelerate in-app video adoption. Dating operators who've been cautious about integrating short-form video into their own products—citing concerns about moderation overhead, technical complexity, or user preference for static profiles—now face a market where their target demographic is spending half their social media time consuming exactly that format. When Instagram trains users to expect video-first experiences, dating apps that offer only photos risk feeling dated by comparison.

    What operators should watch

    Meta hasn't confirmed whether this redesign will roll out universally or remain experimental. Instagram has previously tested features that allow users to customise their Reels and Explore feeds, and the company routinely tests interface changes with small user groups before deciding whether to scale. But the company's disclosed usage data—50% of Instagram time already dedicated to Reels—suggests this isn't a speculative bet.

    Dating operators should audit their Instagram content mix now. Brands deriving meaningful acquisition or engagement from Instagram and still producing predominantly static posts face a narrowing window to develop video production capabilities before organic reach potentially declines. That means hiring or training for Reels-specific content creation, establishing relationships with creators fluent in short-form video, and testing what messaging and creative approaches translate from static to video formats.

    The operators who move early won't just preserve their Instagram presence. They'll gain fluency in a content format that's increasingly central to how their users communicate everywhere—including, eventually, within dating apps themselves. As Instagram expands algorithm controls to give users more customization options, brands will need to ensure their Reels content is optimised to surface in these increasingly personalised feeds. Understanding how the Instagram algorithm prioritises different content types will be essential for operators adapting their strategies.

    • Dating brands must develop Reels-specific production capabilities immediately or accept Instagram as a declining acquisition channel
    • The format shift may accelerate in-app video adoption as users trained on Instagram expect video-first experiences everywhere
    • Operators who move early gain competitive advantage in a content format that's becoming central to how their demographic communicates

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