As Madonna promotes her new album, she’s going where only one pop diva has gone before: Grindr. Ahead of the July launch of Confessions II, Grindr will feature an evolving takeover with exclusive content and limited-edition drops.
The partnership debuted Thursday with Madonna’s profile nestled in Grindr’s grid of nearby users. Tapping the profile opens an ad with a voice memo from the singer, and a link to preorder a limited picture disc vinyl of Confessions II as a nonstop mix that blends each track into the next.
“Hi Grindr, it’s mother,” the voice memo says. “I wanted to go where the hottest action was, so I got on the grid.”
The partnership—which the company says is its largest commercial activation and will add new content over the coming weeks—isn’t Grindr’s first foray into music promotion. Last year, the app collaborated with Christina Aguilera to promote her headline performance at the Portola Music Festival in September 2025.
For CEO George Arison, himself a gay man, working with Madonna was an obvious choice, both because of her stature in the LGBT community, and the amount of engagement the app gets from that demo (he says users spend roughly an hour in the app each day on average).
“I don’t know of a gay guy who doesn’t love Madonna,” he says. “We have a global audience, and we play a really big part in shaping culture for that audience.”
Grindr users are on the app for an hour each day, on average, engaging with their local community. Arison calls it the “gay town square,” and says the identity as the global gayborhood goes beyond just branding. It’s the reality of how users engage with the app.
Arison, who took over the publicly traded app in 2022, sees the partnership as an opportunity for Grindr to push further on his strategy of turning the app into “the global gayborhood in your pocket” by expanding its role in users’ lives. The activation joins other recent efforts to expand Grindr’s scope beyond meeting people, including offering erectile dysfunction and weight loss drugs via its telehealth arm Woodwork.
He also frames it as an opportunity for Grindr to show possible brand partners what it can do for them, showing its capabilities to marry in-app content with physical merchandising. He says technical infrastructure built for the rollout creates a pipeline for future partnerships, Arison says.
Last year, Arison told Fast Company that he sees his role as CEO as partly requiring him to win over the broader business community, who might be hesitant to work with an app explicitly targeted to LGBTQ users (often with a cheeky emphasis on explicit). The Madonna partnership offers an example of a big name leaning into Grindr’s positioning.
“For us as a business, this is a really huge opportunity for being at a bigger stage and then being taken seriously by other partners that we want to work with at scale,” he says.
