Practical Guides

How to Read an Escort Profile — What Everything Actually Means

A practical guide to decoding companion profiles in London. What the terms mean, which details matter, what red flags look like, and how to make a confident, informed choice.

Bluechips London Editorial ·

Reading a companion’s profile for the first time is a slightly unusual experience. The format is unlike anything else online — part professional CV, part personal advertisement, written in a stylised register that mixes plain fact with selective self-presentation. For someone unfamiliar with the conventions, it can be genuinely hard to know what’s actually informative, what’s just marketing language, and what the gaps in the profile might indicate.

This guide decodes the standard elements of a London companion profile, explains the conventions, and gives you a reliable framework for telling high-quality listings from low-quality ones before you make contact with anyone.

The Photos

Photos are the first thing most people look at and often the thing they spend least time thinking critically about.

Quantity

A profile with a single photo is not enough to make a confident judgment from. A single photo is easy to steal. One or two photos of a genuinely beautiful woman on a directory site is often the first sign of a fake or impersonated profile — real companions with real profiles tend to have multiple photos showing different angles, different contexts, and different looks.

Six to twelve photos is a reasonable range for an established companion. More than twenty becomes harder to assess quickly, but is generally not a negative sign on verified profiles.

Consistency

The photos on a profile should be consistent with each other. The same person from different angles and at different times. Skin tone consistent across photos. Age apparent in photos consistent across all images. When photos look as if they could have been taken of several different women, that is either extreme variation in presentation (possible, not always a red flag on its own) or photos collected from multiple sources (which is a serious red flag).

Currency

There is no reliable way to tell from photos alone how recently they were taken. Established companions sometimes have profile photos that are two or three years old. The convention is that a profile should represent you as you currently appear; the ethical standard varies by individual.

The most reliable check is the platform’s verification system. On Bluechips London, our Blue Tick verification requires a live selfie taken at the time of verification, which our review team matches against both the ID document and the profile photos. A Blue Tick tells you that the person in the photos is the same person who holds the profile — and that the matching was done against a recent, live image.

Filters and Editing

Heavy filters are a yellow flag. A mild social media-style filter on one or two photos is common and unremarkable. A filter heavy enough to dramatically alter skin tone, facial features, or body shape across most photos is a sign that the person in the photos may look quite different from the profile.

The Stage Name

Companions work under a chosen professional name for the same reason most professionals maintain some separation between their working lives and their personal ones. A stage name is standard and tells you nothing negative.

What to look for: Does the name appear consistently across their other presence online? Many established companions have profiles on multiple platforms, a presence on review forums, or a long-standing social media presence under the same professional name. This consistency — a name that has a traceable history — is a good indicator of a genuine, established presence rather than a recently created profile.

Age

Self-declared. Companions are required to confirm they are 18 or older on any reputable platform; Bluechips London requires this as a condition of listing, and our Blue Tick verification independently confirms age from a government-issued ID.

The stated age on a profile may not match the age in the photos precisely — profile photos are not always recent. It’s a piece of information rather than a verified fact unless the companion is Blue Tick verified, in which case the date of birth on the ID has been checked by our review team.

Location and Availability Type

Borough or Area

Listings on Bluechips London include a borough — which London area the companion is based in or primarily works from. This matters for both incall (whether you can get to her) and outcall (how far she’ll travel).

Most companions also list their outcall range. “Travelling to all central London boroughs” is common and reasonable. “Travelling UK-wide” is sometimes genuine (for longer bookings) and sometimes overstated marketing.

If you’re searching by area, Bluechips London’s borough filter lets you narrow by location directly — which is considerably more reliable than reading individual profiles to piece together coverage.

Incall / Outcall / Both

This is the single most practically important field on any profile. Incall vs outcall determines the logistics of the entire meeting.

  • Incall only: She has a working space and meets clients there. She doesn’t travel to hotel rooms or private residences. This is often a sign of an established, organised working practice.
  • Outcall only: She travels to clients. This is more common for hotel-focused work, particularly in the premium central London market.
  • Both: The most common listing, meaning she offers either arrangement. Check the rates — outcall almost always costs more than incall, and if the profile lists a single rate for both, ask which it applies to before booking.

Rates

Rates are stated in GBP for a duration: typically 30 minutes, 1 hour, 90 minutes, 2 hours, 3 hours, overnight. Not every companion offers all durations — many have a minimum booking of 1 hour.

What the Numbers Mean

Rates in central London currently (as of 2026) span a very wide range. Independent companions in established locations can charge anywhere from around £150 per hour at the budget end to £1,000+ per hour for the most sought-after profiles in premium areas like Mayfair or Belgravia.

A rate that seems unusually low is not always a bargain. It can indicate a new or not-yet-established profile, but it can also indicate a fake profile used to attract initial contact (with the real situation explained only once you’ve been drawn in). Be particularly cautious with any profile where the rates seem significantly below the market rate for the area.

A rate that seems unusually high is generally less suspicious. Established companions earn the right to high rates through reputation and years of building their clientele.

Extras and Add-ons

Any profile where the base rate seems low and a list of “extras” (at additional cost) is implied rather than stated should be read carefully. Professional companions state their rates clearly. The established norm in the London market is that the hourly rate covers the time — there is no additional negotiation mid-meeting for activities. If a profile seems structured around a low headline rate and implicit additional charges, that is not how legitimate independent companions work.

Services and Service Tags

Many platforms, including Bluechips London, allow companions to tag the specific services or styles of companionship they offer. Reading these tags is more reliable than interpreting free-form text, which can be vague or deliberately ambiguous.

On Bluechips London, service tags are standardised. Companions choose which tags apply to them; our editorial team can remove inappropriate or misleading tags.

Common tags and what they indicate:

  • GFE (Girlfriend Experience): A warm, social, personal style of meeting emphasising genuine connection over transactional interaction. Read our full explanation of GFE.
  • Dinner companion / Social companion: She accompanies clients to restaurants, events, or social functions. This is the companionship role in its most public form.
  • Couples welcome: She is open to bookings with a couple rather than a solo client. These are almost always outcall arrangements.
  • Duos available: She works with another companion for two-companion bookings.

The “About Me” Section

This is the section that most clearly distinguishes a genuine profile from a generic one.

What a genuine “about me” looks like:

  • Written in a consistent, individual voice — it sounds like a person rather than a marketing department.
  • Specific: mentions interests, experiences, things she enjoys, what kind of client she works well with, what makes a good meeting.
  • Honest about what she likes and doesn’t: genuine companions tend to be clear that they enjoy their work and equally clear about what kind of meetings they find rewarding.
  • Often mentions languages, travel experience, professional background (companions frequently have careers and studies alongside their independent work), and aesthetic preferences.

What a template profile looks like:

  • Generic superlatives without specifics: “unforgettable experience,” “perfect girlfriend,” “no disappointments,” with nothing that actually describes a real person.
  • Could apply to any of thousands of profiles interchangeably.
  • Reads like it was written once and copied across multiple listings on multiple platforms with different names attached.

The quality of the writing in an “about me” section is one of the most useful filters available to you. It’s one of the things most difficult to fake convincingly at scale.

Verification Status

This is the single most important trust signal on any legitimate platform.

What verification means on Bluechips London:

Our Blue Tick verification programme means that a member of our review team has personally confirmed:

  1. The companion submitted a real government-issued ID document.
  2. A live selfie matches both the ID photo and the profile photos.
  3. The person is over 18.

This eliminates the most common fraud on companion platforms — profiles using stolen or recycled photos of someone other than the person you’ll meet.

Profiles without Blue Tick:

No verification badge doesn’t automatically mean something is wrong. A new profile may not yet have gone through the process. But for a first meeting, particularly with someone you haven’t met before, filtering for Blue Tick verified profiles only significantly reduces the chance of a poor outcome.

STD Testing Information

Some companions include testing dates on their profiles — typically a month and year for their most recent test. This information is self-declared and cannot be independently verified by the platform.

A testing date stated specifically (“January 2026”) is more credible than a vague claim (“regularly tested”). An outdated testing date (over six months old) may be a sign the companion hasn’t updated her profile recently — which could mean several things.

How you weigh this information is a matter of personal judgment and your own approach to sexual health.

Languages

Language compatibility matters more than it’s given credit for. A meeting where genuine conversation is limited by a significant language barrier is a different experience from one where both parties can express themselves naturally.

Companion profiles on Bluechips London list languages. For GFE-style bookings or longer social engagements, a companion who speaks your language fluently is considerably more valuable than one who speaks it technically. Reading her profile description in your language will tell you immediately how fluent she actually is.

Contact Details

On Bluechips London, contact details — WhatsApp number and phone number — appear directly on the profile. This is intentional: we are a marketing directory, not an intermediary service, and we want companions to be directly contactable so clients can reach them without any platform in the way.

This means:

  • The contact details are provided by the companion herself.
  • She may change them or stop using them — if a listed number isn’t responsive, check whether the profile has been recently updated.
  • First contact should always be conducted respectfully, regardless of how informal the communication channel seems.

How to Use This Framework

When looking at a profile on Bluechips London — or any directory — work through these questions in order:

  1. Are the photos consistent and credible? Multiple photos, consistent person, not heavily filtered.
  2. Is the companion verified? Blue Tick is a meaningful filter.
  3. Does the profile read like a real person? Specific, individual, not a template.
  4. Are the rates clearly stated and in line with the area?
  5. Does the service description match what you’re looking for?
  6. Is the contact information current and does she respond professionally?

Profiles that pass all six checks are, in the London market, almost uniformly genuine and worth serious consideration. Profiles that fail two or more checks are worth approaching with substantial caution, however appealing the photos.

Browse companions on Bluechips London, or start with Blue Tick verified profiles only for the highest level of confidence. For more on the practical side of arranging a first meeting, read our guide on staying safe when meeting a companion in London.

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