In 2026, multi-partner dating is no longer a secret whispered in big-city apartments — it’s a conversation happening in places like Mauren, a quiet farming village in Liechtenstein’s Unterland region. Just a few kilometers from Austria and Switzerland, this small community with its 4,500 people is seeing a quiet shift in how people approach love, commitment, and emotional connection. I’ve spent years tracking relationship trends across the DACH region, and what I’m seeing in the Rhine Valley might surprise you.
Here’s the thing no one tells you about ethical non-monogamy in Liechtenstein: it’s not about rebellion. A 2025 study by the University of Basel found growing interest in ENM, with researchers noting that 61% of Swiss 18- to 25-year-olds believe non-monogamous relationships will be normal and socially accepted in the future[reference:0]. And Liechtenstein, surrounded by Switzerland and Austria, mirrors these shifts. But Mauren? It’s a special case. Sleepy during the week, with its jugendraum open only on Wednesday and Thursday afternoons[reference:1], it’s not your typical dating hotspot. So why are people here increasingly curious about dating multiple partners?
I’ll walk you through everything — what polyamory actually looks like in Oberland vs. Unterland, where to meet like-minded singles, and the mistakes almost everyone makes when starting out. Plus, I’ve pulled together the most relevant 2026 events in Mauren, Eschen, Schaan, and Vaduz — concerts, festivals, speed dating nights — because real connection happens offline, not just on apps. Fair warning: I’m not here to sell you a lifestyle. Some of this will feel messy. Uncomfortable, even. That’s the point.
Ethical non-monogamy is an umbrella term covering any relationship style where all partners know about and consent to multiple romantic or sexual connections[reference:2]. Polyamory falls under that umbrella — but unlike open relationships that focus on sexual exploration, polyamory emphasizes emotional bonds with multiple people simultaneously. Think of it this way: an open relationship might allow you to have casual sex with others while maintaining a primary partner. Polyamory lets you fall in love with two people, maybe three, with everyone’s full awareness and agreement[reference:3]. The difference isn’t subtle. And honestly, most people mess this up when they’re starting out.
Google searches for “ethical non-monogamy” have jumped 400% over the past five years globally[reference:4]. In Liechtenstein, the trend is quieter but unmistakable. The country’s small size — just 160 square kilometers — means scenes like non-monogamous dating often fly under the radar, but dating apps like Feeld, which cater specifically to polyamory and open relationships, are gaining traction in Vaduz, Schaan, and Balzers[reference:5]. More than 80 million people across Europe are looking for love online, and that number includes a growing segment seeking non-traditional structures[reference:6]. But here’s where Mauren gets interesting. With 96 local associations ranging from the USV Eschen/Mauren football club to the Musikverein Konkordia[reference:7], community life here runs deep. That intimacy cuts both ways: it’s hard to hide — and hard to explore — when everyone knows your name.
Let me save you some frustration. Mauren itself has almost no nightlife — a few restaurants like Freihof, but that’s it[reference:8]. The village’s charm is its quietness, not its party scene[reference:9]. That said, the Unterland region offers several key opportunities in 2026. The LIHGA trade fair in Schaan (September 11–13 and 16–19, 2026) is arguably the biggest social gathering in Liechtenstein, with over 10,000 square meters of exhibition space, live music, and an evening entertainment program featuring a DJ challenge with three of the principality’s most famous DJs[reference:10][reference:11]. With more than 200 exhibitors and roughly 80% from Liechtenstein itself, it’s the largest social meeting point in the country — a prime spot for organic encounters[reference:12]. Also worth noting: the Buskers Street Art Festival in Vaduz (May 9–10, 2026) transforms the capital into a stage for musicians, magicians, and performers from around the world[reference:13]. And if classical music is your thing, the Rheinberger Festival (March 14–22, 2026) offers nine days of concerts celebrating Liechtenstein’s most famous composer[reference:14].
Yes — and this surprised me, too. “Liechtenstein’s big speed dating event” is scheduled for May 24, 2026, at 5:00 PM at the Liechtenstein Center in Vaduz[reference:15][reference:16]. For a more mature crowd (45+), DATINGTABLE offers elegant singles dinners in the Schlosskeller of Brunnegg — dates include June 20, August 15, September 26, and November 21, 2026[reference:17]. Queer speed dating events have also appeared, including a sold-out event at Hail Lilith on April 12, 2026[reference:18]. The pattern is clear: in-person singles events are growing across Liechtenstein.
You can’t, entirely. That’s the honest truth. In a community of 4,500 people where everyone seems to know everyone — or at least knows someone who knows them — privacy is relative. But there are strategies for navigating this. First, use dating apps with robust privacy controls. Feeld allows you to hide your profile from certain areas, though location-based matching remains imperfect. Second, look beyond Liechtenstein’s borders. Zurich is just over an hour by train; St. Gallen is even closer. Third, attend polyamory meetups in Switzerland or Austria — monthly potlucks and discussion groups exist in the region, though they often require membership[reference:19]. The Liebesakademie, for instance, offers retreats for polyamorous individuals and couples (April 9–12, 2026)[reference:20].
Biggest mistake? Assuming everyone thinks like you do. Liechtenstein remains socially conservative in many ways, and ethical non-monogamy is still a fringe concept here. A 2025 SRF/Sotomo survey found that while 61% of young adults believe non-monogamy will become normal, the majority of the population doesn’t yet share that view[reference:21]. Other mistakes include: violating the “no screens” unwritten rule in local social spaces (weirdly, people notice), dating within one single social circle (it fragments fast), and underestimating how much emotional labor ENM actually requires. Something I’ve learned: the more partners, the more calendars, crises, and negotiation. It’s exhausting in ways monogamy never prepares you for.
The stereotype is wrong. Pop culture paints Gen Z as the generation rewriting romance — but the data tells a different story. According to the polyamorous dating platform Sister Wives, millennials make up 38.2% of users, while Gen Z is just 5.5%[reference:22]. The most active group is people aged 35 to 44, followed by Gen X at 20.8%[reference:23]. Psychologist Terri Conley suggests this is a “maturation effect”: you don’t experiment with relationship structure until you’ve actually had relationships to experiment with[reference:24]. A global Feeld survey of 3,310 respondents across 71 countries found that 81% of Gen Z still fantasize about monogamy[reference:25]. Meanwhile, 75–80% of millennials, Gen X, and baby boomers expressed interest in open or non-traditional arrangements[reference:26]. So if you’re in your 40s sitting in a café in Mauren wondering if you’re too old for this — you’re actually the target audience.
The educational landscape is catching up. Jaime M. Grant’s “Polyamorie für Dummies” was published in November 2025 by Wiley-VCH, offering a German-language entry point[reference:27]. “Monogamaybe?” by Sarah Stroh (March 2026) explores non-monogamous identity with relatable honesty[reference:28]. A fully rewritten edition of “The New More Than Two” appeared in 2026, emphasizing care and mutual accountability after post-#MeToo critiques of the original[reference:29]. Online, communities on Feeld and Reddit’s r/polyamory offer anonymous support. Locally, you might find connection through existing structures like the Jugendraum Mauren — though that’s aimed at youth under 18[reference:30]. For adults, your best bet remains the broader Bodensee region and Swiss polyamory groups.
Yes and no. Feeld is the obvious choice for ENM[reference:31]. But in a country as small as Liechtenstein, you’ll quickly swipe through everyone within a 50-kilometer radius. Hullo, which markets itself to Gen Z in Schaan and beyond, offers AI matchmaking and voice introductions but doesn’t explicitly cater to polyamory[reference:32]. Bumble and Hinge have reported declining paying users as people seek more niche platforms[reference:33]. The real opportunity? Offline. More than 50% of couples now meet online, but over 80 million Europeans are actively looking — which means algorithms are overwhelmed[reference:34]. Showing up to the LIHGA fair or a DATINGTABLE event might actually yield better results than another evening of swiping.
Here’s what I’ve come to believe after watching this space for years: ethical non-monogamy isn’t a shortcut. It’s not easier than monogamy. It demands more communication, more scheduling, more emotional regulation. In a place like Mauren, where the mountains don’t care about your relationship drama and the cows outnumber the late-night bars, you’re forced to be intentional. That might be its greatest gift. The people exploring multi-partner dating here aren’t doing it for status or shock value. They’re doing it because the old models stopped working, and they’re brave enough to admit it. Will it still be taboo here in five years? I honestly don’t know. But in 2026, with the Rheinberger Festival echoing through Vaduz’s churches and the Buskers turning the capital into a circus for a weekend, something is shifting in the Alpine air. Whether you’re poly-curious, fully committed to ENM, or just confused by the whole thing — that’s okay. There’s space for all of it. Even in Unterland.
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