In China, You Can Now Rent a Friend… And Millions of People Are Paying for It

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Imagine paying someone…

 

Not to clean your house.

 

Not to drive you somewhere.

 

Not to teach you a skill.

 

But simply…

 

To walk with you.

 

Listen to you.

 

Or keep you company for an afternoon.

 

It sounds like science fiction.

 

Yet in China, it’s becoming a booming business.

 

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Across major Chinese cities, a new market is exploding:

 

Companions for hire.

 

Need someone to go jogging with?

 

There’s an app for that.

 

Want company for a mountain hike?

 

You can book someone.

 

Heartbroken and just need to talk?

 

Someone will listen—for a fee.

 

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The concept is surprisingly simple.

 

Users pay strangers to spend time with them.

 

No dating.

 

No therapy.

 

No long-term commitment.

 

Just human presence.

 

For a few hours.

 

And then everyone goes home.

 

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The phenomenon has grown so quickly that Chinese state media estimate consumers could spend more than 50 billion yuan this year on these companionship services alone.

 

That’s more than 6 billion euros for something many people used to get for free:

 

Company.

 

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Some hire a companion to exercise.

 

Others to study online together.

 

Others simply need someone to hear them talk after a difficult breakup or a stressful day at work.

 

Because sometimes…

 

The hardest thing to find in a crowded city isn’t money.

 

It’s someone who has time for you.

 

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Behind this trend lies a deeper reality.

 

Long working hours.

 

Massive urban migration.

 

Growing loneliness among young professionals.

 

In a hyperconnected society, many people have thousands of followers…

 

But nobody to call for a walk.

 

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And that’s what makes this story so fascinating.

 

Technology promised to connect humanity.

 

Yet it has also created a world where companionship itself is becoming a service.

 

A product.

 

Something you can order with a few taps on your phone.

 

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Whether this trend spreads beyond China remains to be seen.

 

But one thing is already certain.

 

The business of fighting loneliness has become a billion-dollar industry.

 

And that says a lot about the world we’re living in.

 

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So here’s the question: if hiring someone just to talk, walk, or share a moment becomes normal… are we solving loneliness—or simply putting a price tag on friendship?

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