The Hebrew letter Bet, the first letter of the Torah. Bet means house.

A Jewish connection platform, Los Angeles

Where mazel tovs begin.

Matchmaking, dating, Shabbat tables, and community. Four separate doors, one house. No swiping.

Save my seat

Save my seat

Take your seat.

The first tables seat waitlist members.

Only for a text when your table is set.

What brings you here? Pick what fits. You can change it later.

Shabbat Tables: which kind of table suits you?

A friend, a rabbi, your savta. Someone who knows you.

Mazel tov. Your seat is saved.

We will email you before we open your door. Nothing is shared without your say.


Four doors, one house

One platform, four ways in. The lanes never mix.

You choose why you're here, and everyone you meet in a lane chose that lane too. Marriage-track members never appear in the dating pool, and dinner guests are just dinner guests.

  • Marriage

    Tell our matchmaker what you're building, not just what you like. A few introductions at a time, and people from the community who know you both can vouch before you ever meet.

    Separate lane. Separate profile. Nothing crosses without you.

  • Dating

    Dating without the slot machine. A few real introductions a week, chosen for you. Not a feed of faces to burn through.

    Separate lane. Separate profile. Nothing crosses without you.

  • Shabbat Tables

    Six to eight people around a real table: some at LA restaurants, some at members' homes, matched by age, language, and how observant the evening should feel. You'll know the neighborhood and the vibe. Who's coming stays a surprise until you sit down.

    Separate lane. Separate profile. Nothing crosses without you.

  • Community

    Holidays, volunteering, events: the parts of Jewish life that need more chairs. Come for one dinner, stay for the calendar.

    Separate lane. Separate profile. Nothing crosses without you.

Shabbat Tables

This Friday, 18 minutes before sunset

Two ways to sit down.

Six to eight guests. No phones on the table. We build each table by age, language, and how the evening keeps Shabbat. You choose the kind of table.

In homes

  • A vouched member hosts, and it works the way Shabbat dinners have always worked: guests bring a dish or chip in, settled during the week.
  • Guests are seated before candle lighting, and the timing is yours: Friday night dinner, Shabbat lunch, or a Thursday night table if that fits your Shabbat better.
  • Walkable matching for those who do not drive on Shabbat.
  • Kosher by the host's declared standard, stated on every invitation: certified kitchen, kosher style, or vegetarian. You pick a table that matches how you keep.
  • The host is the baal habayit. Responsibility for the evening sits with the host and the guests together.

Nothing is paid, carried, or signed on Shabbat. Ever.

  • Before candle lighting
  • Host led
  • Walkable
  • Kosher declared

Out in the city

  • A reserved table at an LA restaurant, kosher options always marked. Casual and easy: you pay for your own meal, and we take care of who is around it.
  • Weeknights and motzei Shabbat, prepaid online during the week, so no money moves at the table.
  • The same curation: six to eight people worth meeting.

MazelMeet introduces people. The dinner itself belongs to the host and the guests: hosts declare their own kashrut level, guests choose accordingly, and both sides accept a short assumption-of-risk acknowledgment before the table locks. That's the whole deal, stated plainly.

Eight seats. One Friday. Save yours.

The yenta network

Somebody always knows somebody.

Know two people who should meet? Be the reason.

Every Jewish community runs on somebody who knows everybody. If that's you, the friend who's always setting people up, MazelMeet gives you real tools. Vouch for singles you believe in, suggest matches to our matchmaker, and take the credit when it works.

A yenta here is a trusted community member who vouches, not a gossip. Vouches are visible only inside the marriage lane, never sold, never public. Yentas see only what members choose to share with them, and never the other lanes. Hosts of home tables pass through the same vouching before they open a door.

Join the yenta network

Welcome to the network. We'll write before launch with how vouching works. Start thinking about who you'd seat together.


FAQ

Is this only for Orthodox Jews?

No. MazelMeet is for the whole spectrum: secular, traditional, Reform, Conservative, Orthodox, and everyone still figuring it out. You set your own level of observance, and we use it only to match you well. Your Shabbat table can be kosher and shomer Shabbat, or Friday-night-dinner-because-savta-did-it. Both are the real thing.

What about kosher and Shabbat observance?

Every table says what it is before you sit down. Restaurant tables always mark kosher options. Home tables state the host's kashrut level up front, from strictly kosher to kosher-style, and you choose the table that matches how you keep. That call stays yours, never an algorithm's. If you're shomer Shabbat, home tables were built for you: we group them within walking distance, timing follows Shabbat (Friday night dinner or Shabbat lunch, with Thursday night tables if you'd rather spend Shabbat at your own table), and nothing about the evening requires a phone or a wallet.

Who is responsible at a home table?

The host and the guests. MazelMeet makes the introduction and steps back, the same as when a friend seats you at their Shabbat table. The host's home is their own: they set the rules, declare their kashrut level, and decide how their table runs. Guests choose freely and come as guests. Before a home table locks in, host and guests each accept a short acknowledgment that says exactly this: the platform introduces, the people own the evening. No fine print. That is the whole arrangement.

Is my data private?

Yes, and we hold ourselves to a higher bar than most apps because of what you trust us with. Religious affiliation and observance level are sensitive personal data under privacy law, and we treat them that way: encrypted in storage, never sold, never shared with advertisers or data brokers, and deleted whenever you ask. Joining the waitlist stores only what you type into this form. Nothing is collected behind your back.

When does it launch?

We're launching in Los Angeles, one neighborhood at a time. Shabbat Tables come first, before the full app, and waitlist members get the first invitations. We'll email you exact dates. That's the whole reason we asked for your email.

What does it cost?

The waitlist is free. Restaurant tables: you pay the restaurant for your own meal, and we add a small seat fee once we're past the first dinners. Home tables: guests bring a dish or chip in for groceries, settled between you and the host, and we charge nothing for now. Matchmaking will be paid when it launches. We'd rather charge you a fair price than sell your data, and we'll publish prices before asking for a card.

I'm not looking to date. Is this for me?

Yes. Half of MazelMeet has nothing to do with romance: Shabbat Tables, the friends lane, and the community calendar. Pick friends or community on the form and you'll never be shown to anyone who's dating. The lanes are separate by design, not by settings.

How is this different from dating apps?

No swiping, no feed, no engagement tricks. On a swipe app the product is your attention. Here the product is the meeting itself: a matchmaker who reads your answers, a community that vouches for people, and a chair at a real table on Friday. We win when you stop needing us.