

GoodRec vs Hank
GoodRec is a sports app and Hank is a friendship app. They take different approaches to helping you meet people IRL — here’s a detailed comparison.
Side-by-side comparison · Updated 2026
At a glance
Pricing
Both GoodRec and Hank fall in the Free price range. GoodRec: Free for pickup games; league fees vary by sport and location. Hank: Free to download and use.
Format & matching
Both apps use groups of Varies, and both use interest-based matching.
How they work
GoodRec: Download the app and pick your sport — soccer, basketball, volleyball, pickleball, and more. Set your city and browse available pickup games and leagues near you. Each listing shows the time, location, skill level, and how many spots are open. Tap to join a game, and show up ready to play. You can also join organized leagues with scheduled seasons and standings. After playing, rate the experience and connect with other players you met on the field.
Hank: Download the app and create a profile. Browse a calendar of local activities — walks, coffee meetups, happy hours, museum visits, book clubs, and more — happening near you or online. Join anything that catches your eye. Before the event, you can see other attendees' profiles and start a conversation. After the activity, stay connected with people you clicked with through in-app messaging. If you don't see the right activity, create your own — set the time, place, and description, and Hank handles the rest.
What to love
GoodRec: 400,000+ players across 50+ cities means you'll actually find games near you. Covers pickup games and organized leagues — casual and competitive in one app. Open to all skill levels and genders, so nobody feels excluded. Free to join pickup games with no subscription required. 1,000+ games happening every week across the network.
Hank: Purpose-built for 55+ — no competing with twenty-somethings or navigating dating-app mechanics. Completely free with no subscription walls or premium tiers. Both in-person and online activities mean you can participate regardless of mobility. You can host your own events, not just join existing ones. Clean, simple interface designed for accessibility.
Reality check
GoodRec: Sports-focused — not useful if you're looking for non-athletic social activities. Game availability varies significantly by city and sport. League fees can add up depending on the sport and season. No personality matching or social features beyond the games themselves.
Hank: Currently strongest in the New York area — thinner activity selection in other regions. No Android app yet (planned but not launched). Smaller user base compared to mainstream apps means fewer activities in less populated areas. No algorithmic matching — you browse and choose activities yourself.
Søren's take
On GoodRec: GoodRec solves a very specific problem that anyone who's moved to a new city knows well: you want to play pickup basketball or join a soccer league, but you don't know anyone with a team. The app cuts through all of that — browse, tap, show up, play. The 50+ city footprint and 400K user base mean this isn't vaporware; there are actually games happening. The limitation is obvious: if you're not into sports, this isn't for you. But if you are, GoodRec is the fastest path from 'I wish I could play' to actually playing.
On Hank: Hank fills a gap that's been wide open for years: most friendship apps are designed for people in their 20s and 30s, and the 55+ crowd has been left to figure it out on their own. Hank's approach is refreshingly straightforward — here's a calendar of things to do, go do them with people your age. No personality quizzes, no swiping, no algorithms. The free pricing is a big deal for this demographic. The main limitation is geographic reach — it started in NYC and is still building out — but if you're 55+ and looking for community, this should be on your phone.





