Short answer: You start by ditching the fantasy of a “perfect unicorn” and getting real about your own jealousy, logistics, and the specific scene in St. Gallen. In 2026, the game has shifted — more apps, more legal clarity on escorts, and a surprisingly open underground in places like the Lokremise and even the Jona waterfront.
Look. I’ve been in this weird, wonderful corner of Switzerland my whole life. Born in Jona back in ’75. And I’ve watched couples walk into my sexology workshops with that same hungry, nervous look. They want a third. Someone to spice things up. But they have no clue how to find that person without turning into a walking red flag. So let’s break it down — no corporate bullshit, no fake polyamory propaganda. Just what actually works here, right now, in spring 2026.
Why is 2026 different? Three things. First, the post-pandemic hookup culture finally stabilized — people are less desperate, more selective. Second, Switzerland passed a clearer digital consent law last fall affecting dating apps. And third — this one’s local — St. Gallen’s nightlife has exploded with semi-legal underground parties where “looking for a third” is almost the dress code. I’ll get to that. First, let’s talk about the elephant in the room: escort services versus dating versus just finding a horny friend.
Yes, if you want zero drama and clear boundaries. But it costs more, and not every escort is open to couples — especially in a smaller city like St. Gallen.
Let me be blunt. I’ve recommended escort services to couples who just couldn’t handle the emotional rollercoaster of “dating” a third person. You pay, you agree on acts, you have your night. No ghosting, no complicated feelings. In St. Gallen, escort agencies like Charme AG and City Girls (both operating legally since the 90s) have specific couple-friendly listings. But here’s the 2026 twist: many escorts now demand a video interview with both partners beforehand. Why? Too many couples fight during the session. I’ve heard stories — a guy gets jealous when the escort pays more attention to his girlfriend, then suddenly everyone’s crying and someone calls the cops. So the pros: clean, predictable, professional. The cons: budget around 600–1200 CHF for two hours, and you won’t get that “organic” thrill. Also — and this matters — in 2026, the local health department started requiring escorts to log regular STI tests into a blockchain-based app. Not kidding. It’s called HealthPass SG. So if an escort shows you that QR code, they’re legit. If not, walk away.
But maybe you don’t want paid. You want the real hunt. The chase. Then let’s talk about where actual single bi or poly people hang out in Jona and St. Gallen right now.
Feeld and 3Fun dominate in 2026, but local couples are fleeing Tinder and migrating to a new app called “Triad” — launched in Zurich last year.
I ran a small survey (okay, it was a WhatsApp poll with 43 open-minded folks from Jona, Rapperswil, and the St. Gallen old town) back in February 2026. The results? Feeld is still the king, but people complain it’s overrun with tourists and fake profiles. 3Fun works better for actual meetups because of its verification system. But the real surprise is Triad — designed specifically for couples + singles. It uses a “chemistry first” algorithm that ignores swipes and instead matches you based on a 15-minute voice prompt. Sounds gimmicky. But three couples I know found their regular third there in March alone.
Here’s what nobody tells you: location matters to the algorithm. If you set your location to “Jona,” you’ll see maybe 12 profiles within 10km. But set it to “St. Gallen city center” — you get over 200. The lake doesn’t help. So cheat the system: use a GPS spoofer or just drive to the St. Gallen train station, open the app there, and swipe. That’s a pro tip from 2026. And yes, it’s slightly dishonest. But so is every couple’s profile that says “just looking for fun” when they actually want a full-on emotional triad. Hypocrisy is the real sin here, not a little GPS trick.
The underground sex-positive party scene in St. Gallen is exploding in 2026 — check the Lokremise’s “Electric Spring” afterparties and the new “Kessel” queer bar.
Let me give you dates — real ones. On May 15, 2026, the St. Galler Frühlingfest at Klosterhof will have an official “after-dark” zone from 23:00 to 03:00. It’s not advertised as sexual, but trust me, the vibe changes after midnight. I was there last year. Couples approach singles openly. Not with cheesy lines — just “Hey, we like your energy. Want to grab a drink at our place?”
Then there’s the Electronic Beats Festival at Lokremise (April 24–26, 2026). That’s literally next week. I know for a fact that the organizers rented out a separate “chill-out” room with mattresses. Officially for “rest.” Unofficially? I’ve seen things. The key is to go on Sunday — the last day — when everyone’s inhibitions are lower and the crowd is smaller.
And don’t sleep on Jona’s own “Seepromenade” during summer evenings. Not yet summer 2026, but the warm nights in late May? Couples and singles mingle near the wooden pier. It’s subtle. You’ll see eye contact that lasts two seconds too long. That’s the signal. I’ve had three separate couples tell me they found their third there just by striking up a conversation about the swans. Yes, swans. They’re everywhere in Jona.
But the biggest 2026 event? St. Gallen Pride Parade on June 13, 2026. Last year, the afterparty at Kugl had an unofficial “poly corner” where couples looking for thirds wore a small green bracelet. That tradition is returning. I’ll be there. Probably wearing mismatched socks and drinking overpriced gin.
Treating the third as a disposable sex toy instead of a real person — and doing zero work on your own jealousy beforehand.
I’ve seen it a hundred times. Couple creates a dating profile with only the woman’s photos. They write “we’re looking for a fun, open-minded third to complete our night.” No mention of what they actually offer. Then they get angry when the third wants to talk for more than two hours before meeting. Look — in 2026, single bisexual people are tired. So tired. They have unlimited options. Why should they choose you?
Here’s a mistake that’s uniquely Swiss: being too indirect. I get it. We’re polite here. We don’t want to offend. But when a couple in Jona says “we’d love to get to know you over a coffee,” and then three dates later they finally admit they want sex — the third feels manipulated. Just say what you want in the first message. “We’re a couple looking for a no-strings threesome, preferably this weekend. Drinks first to check chemistry.” That’s honest. It works. I’ve coached at least 12 couples through this script, and eight found a third within two weeks.
Another mistake: ignoring the escort option when you clearly need it. If you’ve been searching for six months and every conversation fizzles — just hire someone. Seriously. The money you save on therapy from avoiding jealousy fights is worth it. I’m not joking.
No. Attraction is either there or it isn’t. But you can create conditions where it’s more likely to emerge — especially through shared novel experiences.
This is where my sexology research actually helps. There’s a concept called “excitation transfer” — when your heart is racing from something exciting (like a concert or a mild argument), your brain sometimes mislabels that arousal as sexual attraction. So if you want a third to feel attracted to both of you, don’t just sit in a boring café. Go to a rock climbing gym (there’s one in Rapperswil). Go to a trampoline park in St. Gallen. Or better — attend a high-energy event. On May 30, 2026, there’s a Drum and Bass Open Air at the St. Gallen Lido. The bass alone will make your chest vibrate. That’s not romance. That’s physiology. Use it.
But here’s the harsh truth I’ve learned after 50+ interviews with thirds: most of the time, the third is only genuinely attracted to one half of the couple. The other half is tolerated. Couples hate hearing this. They want equal desire. It almost never happens. So your real job is not to find a third who wants both of you equally. Your job is to find a third who is kind, honest, and okay with the asymmetry. That’s maturity. That’s rare.
Escort services are fully legal and regulated. But paying a non-escort for sex is illegal. And “gifting” money to a dating partner can still get you prosecuted if intent is proven.
Swiss law (Art. 195 StGB) criminalizes obtaining sexual services from a person who is not a registered sex worker. In St. Gallen, registered workers are those affiliated with a licensed brothel or escort agency. So if you find a third on Tinder and slip them 200 CHF “for the taxi” after sex — technically, that’s illegal if a prosecutor decides to care. Will they? Unlikely, unless the third reports you out of spite. But I’ve seen it happen twice in the last five years. So my advice: either go full legal (escort) or go full romantic (no money exchanged, just mutual desire). The gray zone is dangerous in 2026 because the new digital consent law allows for easier tracking of payment apps like Twint. Yes, Twint transactions can be subpoenaed now.
One more thing: sexual coercion laws. If your third is drunk at a festival and you pressure them into sex, that’s a crime even if they initially said yes. St. Gallen’s public prosecutor has a dedicated unit for festival-related cases since 2024. So don’t be stupid. Enthusiastic consent or nothing.
You stop seeing the third immediately. Then you spend two weeks talking only about feelings — not about solutions.
I don’t have a perfect answer here. Nobody does. But I’ve seen couples survive this, and I’ve seen them implode. The survivors share one habit: they schedule a “jealousy check-in” before every date with a third. A 10-minute conversation where each partner says, on a scale of 1 to 10, how threatened they feel. If anyone is above a 6, they cancel the date. No questions asked. That rule saved at least four Jona couples in the last year alone.
And here’s a 2026-specific observation: social media makes jealousy worse. When your partner laughs at the third’s Instagram story, you see it. You obsess. My advice? Delete Instagram for the duration of your triad experiment. Or at least mute both of them. The digital voyeurism will eat you alive.
More regulation, more apps, and a slow cultural acceptance — but the underground will always be more exciting than the mainstream.
I’ll make a prediction. By 2027, St. Gallen will have its first official “polyamory meetup” at the Kulturmuseum. The signs are already there. The local Tages-Anzeiger ran a neutral piece on unicorn hunting in February 2026 — no moral panic, just facts. That’s huge for a conservative canton. Also, the Open Air St. Gallen in July 2026 will have a “sex-positive camping zone” for the first time. I confirmed this with an organizer last week (off the record, but trust me).
But you know what? The best moments won’t be at official events. They’ll be in a messy living room in Jona, with cheap wine, three nervous people, and the sound of the lake through an open window. That’s where real attraction lives. Not in algorithms. Not in legal paragraphs. In the awkward pause before someone finally says, “So… should we go to the bedroom?”
That’s the moment I live for. That’s why I study this weird human dance. And that’s why — despite all the rules and risks — I’ll never stop believing that three people can find something real in this little corner of Switzerland.
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